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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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To Vanish Handkerchiefs.--Not being solid bodies, handkerchiefs
will require different treatment, and present the greatest
difficulties, which are fully compensated for by the superior
effects produced. In the first place, the performer must be
careful to borrow a lady's small handkerchief, if for the purpose
of vanishing. In performing The Knots (page 218) a small
handkerchief is generally included amongst those borrowed. It is
not used for the trick; but the performer says he is very fond
of such handkerchiefs, and forthwith rolls it up in his hands,
pops it into his mouth, and
swallows it.
Whilst the company are wondering, he suddenly pulls
the handkerchief out of his leg. This is a most wonderful
sleight, and one the conjuror must endeavour to become perfect
in. He should begin with a small piece of muslin, which rolls up
very tight and easily. This he takes between the two hands, the
left hand below, with its back turned somewhat towards the
company, and rolls it sharply round and round, until he feels
that it is well balled. Then, with the right hand, he apparently
takes it up, the left hand really retaining it by means of the
thumb, and grasping the coat-flap, as in other cases, or the wand
under left armpit. The right hand apparently conveys the
handkerchief to the mouth, where the choking and swallowing
performance is gone through. After a pause of a couple of
seconds, the conjuror looks curiously down at his leg, and,
pouncing at a spot in the rear of the thigh, just above the knee
- joint, presses the handkerchief there, to enable the fingers to
obtain a hold of a very small portion of it. It is then at once
jerked forcibly away, when it will appear to the spectators
precisely as though it had been pulled out through the cloth. The
different movements must all follow one another with regularity
and swiftness, and yet the performer must not appear to be
hurrying himself in the least. If the handkerchief experimented
upon be large, some risk is run of a portion appearing from the
left hand. Even with small handkerchiefs this will, at times,
occur; but if the performer carries out the movements of the
right hand properly, the eyes of the company will be directed
solely to that.
The same sleight is employed in feigning
to throw back a handkerchief to its owner, the action of throwing
being employed instead of affecting to place the article in the
mouth. In this case, it is as well to pivot round at once,
vesting the handkerchief in so doing, and then at once inquiring,
with empty hands, if the handkerchief arrived at its destination
all right. It may be afterwards produced from
he interior of a spectator's coat, by being whipped quickly in
and then produced very slowly and at extended length. If this
reproduction is to follow quickly, then do not vest, which is
only done for the purpose of showing the hands empty. If the
performer pleases, he may plunge his hand into his breast, and
produce the handkerchief; but it will cause less wonderment, and
no amusement at all.
Small birds present considerable difficulty, the object being to
conjure with the bird without injuring it. A bird cannot be
palmed, like a walnut, nor can it be rolled up, like a
handkerchief. But, strange to say, the very difficulty of the
feat assists the performer. In the first place, the company never
suspect that the bird is about to be made to disappear, unless
the performer is weak enough to forewarn them; and, secondly,
never having experimented, they do not suppose for an instant
that the bird will be simply retained in the hand all the time,
as it really is. All the conjuror has to do is to hold the bird
in the right hand, outside the wings, and head downwards, the
tail pointing up the wrist, and then affect to put it in the left
hand, which is bulged so as to appear to hold it. The wand must
be under the right armpit, and the right hand seizes it at once,
the left hand being struck and opened, showing the bird to be
flown. The sooner the bird is reproduced the better. The most
unlikely, and therefore the best, place to produce it from is the
bottom of the trouser--a lively course of speculation as to how it
got there being thrown open to the company. If it be desired to
get rid of the bird altogether, the performer must pivot round
and vest. There is not much chance of the bird moving in that
position, but, of course, it will be better for the performer to
make an early exit, and relieve himself of the encumbrance.
Doves are made to disappear by means of the shelf at the back of
the table, or the pocket directed to be made at the bottom of the
coat-tail. The shelf vanish is more open to suspicion, but I
have, nevertheless, found it enormously successful, when-properly
managed. The performer, in the first
instance, must not announce, by word or deed, that the
disappearance is about to take place. Standing to the left (his
left, facing the audience) of the table, and slightly to the rear
of it, he takes the dove in the right hand. Walking briskly past
the table, at the back, he casts his eyes upwards, and just as he
reaches the extreme corner of the table, makes a movement of
tossing the bird into the air. It is, instead, placed gently (not
dropped, or thrown) upon the end of the shelf, the brisk pace of
the performer carrying him at once a good yard beyond the table,
from which spot the dove is apparently cast into the air. The
success of the sleight depends very much upon the exactness with
which the performer imitates the actual throwing of a bird into
the air, and the fearlessness with which it is conducted. Any
symptom of a glance at the shelf would be fatal. The bearings
must be taken whilst stationary, and the rest carried out with
the eyes fixed earnestly on the ceiling.
Rabbits and guinea pigs
may be similarly treated; but large-sized rabbits are unsuited,
since it is not easy to place them upon the shelf. When the
pocket is used, supposing it to be in the right coat-tail, as it
probably would be, the performer should stand with that side away
from the audience, and ascertain, by means of the right hand, if
the mouth of the pocket be open. Lean slightly over to the right,
and then, taking the dove in the right hand, make a movement of
casting it into the air, straight upwards, whither the eyes are
directed. It is, of course, left in the pocket, head downwards.
An attempt to place it there tail first would be likely to lead
to disaster. As this sleight may be performed away from any table
or chair, it is, of course, to be preferred. It is, undoubtedly,
more difficult of accomplishment than the shelf vanish, requiring
more neatness in depositing the bird; for, if the downward sweep
be too vigorous, it will have the effect of disturbing the
coat-tail, which will be momentarily seen, pushed out behind the
performer, by the company, and the place of concealment thereby
betrayed. It need hardly be pointed out that, in
either case, the hand must grasp the bird firmly by the body,
clasping the wings tightly down. If it be felt struggling in the
pocket, the performer should bow himself off at once.
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