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INTRODUCTION
PALMING
TRICKS WITH COINS
TRICKS WITH COMMON OBJECTS
TRICKS WITH CUPS & BALLS
TRICKS WITH HANDKERCHIEFS
CHINESE TRICKS
TRICKS AT TABLE
TRICKS WITH CARDS
GENERAL REMARKS
THE TABLE & DRESS
SLEIGHTS & PROPERTIES FOR GENERAL USE
TRICKS WITH CARDS
TRICKS WITH HANDKERCHIEFS & GLOVES
TRICKS WITH COINS
MISCELLANEOUS
THE CORNUCOPIAN HAT
TRICKS WITH WATCHES & LIVE STOCK
SHAM MESMERISM, CLAIRVOYANCE, etc.
FINAL INSTRUCTIONS
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Sleights.--Often, in the description of a trick, the learner is
told that a handkerchief, coin, egg, orange, or other article has
to be made to disappear or appear by sleight of hand. In the
descriptions here given, my own methods naturally appear in
preponderance over those of others; but it is a mistake for
conjurors to confine themselves arbitrarily to any such,
whosesoever they be, or whatever their nature. The peculiar means
for magically vanishing or producing an article which has seemed
to me to be most convenient under the conditions governing the
particular trick under notice, I have always laid the most stress
upon; but it is very likely that, were half a dozen experts to
write upon the same tricks, they would each vary more or less in
the precise means by which the
same results were arrived at. This is only as it should be, the
success of a conjuror, like that of an actor, depending, in a
very great measure, upon his originality or individuality. The
reader will notice that I frequently describe a trick, and then
give one or more alternative ways of doing it, the last-named
being usually methods I have seen adopted with success by other
conjurors. In order to save endless repetition, I give here a few
sleights which the learner should be incessantly practising, just
as he would the pass or the palm. Some of the feats actually form
small tricks in themselves, but are only introduced by the
performer as suddenly inspired interpolations in the course of a
trick, of which they may, as a fact, really form part. For the
disappearance of a coin or coins, the various palms provide; the
method described in connection with the cups and balls (page 55)
suffices for the evanishment of marbles, nuts, and articles of
that size; whilst the palming of cards has been specially
treated. The other sleights which I have found most necessary are
as follows:
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