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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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The Invisible Transit.-This is a remarkably effective
coin trick. Several coins are inclosed in a little box, which is
stood in a position close to the audience. An empty tumbler is
placed upon a chair or table far away on the stage, and the
performer, abstracting the coins one by one from the box,
Ëpasses" them into the distant glass, into which they are heard
to fall. On the glass being brought forward, the coins are poured
from it, and the box into which they were put is found to be
empty.
The tumbler used should be coloured and opaque,
or semi-opaque. Into it is fitted a zinc plate, depicted at
Fig.46. This plate is, it will be seen, divided into two unequal
portions, which are then hinged together. B is an arm which, in
the position shown in the sketch, prevents the flap C from
opening; and E is a tiny pin fitted into C for the purpose of
preventing the arm B going too far, and so
becoming difficult to control. At D is a pin which, first
connected with the arm B, runs through the plate, and then
through the bottom of the tumbler. Underneath, it is provided
with another arm (A, Fig. 47), the position of which should
correspond with that of B. The pin D should be considerably
larger than the holes (they should be round ones) in the glass
and zinc plate, and those portions of it which are to pass
through the said holes must be filed down to the necessary
thinness. By this means two shoulders will be formed, which will
prevent the plate from coming down too far, and thus keep a space
clear between it and the bottom of the tumbler. This space should
be about three-
quarters of an inch in depth. The best method for fixing A to D
is to have a tiny hole through the protruding end of the latter,
through which a cross-pin can be passed. It will be seen that so
long as the arm B is kept against the pin E, or anywhere near it,
the flap C cannot possibly open, even though the tumbler be
inverted. The shifting aside of the arm A will cause a
simultaneous and equal movement on the part of B, and, when the
glass is again inverted, whatever has been concealed in the space
beneath C will fall out.
The performer will also require two little boxes, resembling each
other in every particular. If nothing else be at hand, then
little fancy cardboard boxes may be used, but it is by far the best to have a couple turned out of some light wood. The
turner should receive directions to turn them both out of the
same length of wood, which should have some slight imperfection
running through it as this will cause each box to be naturally
marked in a similar manner. Should one lid have a little knot in
it and the other be without such a blemish, it can be faithfully
imitated by making a hole in the wood and running a little
shellac into it. The boxes should be turned as lightly as
possible, consistent with strength, and should just admit a
half-crown. The interior depth should be that of six half-crowns.
One of these boxes the performer conceals under the vest band.
The tumbler he loads with four or five half-crowns, placed in the
space under C, and the arm B is turned into position against E.
This glass is placed upon the table. In one outside trouser
pocket is a half-crown.
The preparations made, the performer advances with five other
half-crowns and one of the little boxes, and gives the whole into
the hands of a member of the audience, with the request to have
the box examined and the coins placed in it. Whilst this is being
done, the concealed box is got down from the vest into the left
hand. The box, with the money in it, is taken by the right hand,
and apparently put into the left. It is, however, palmed, and the
empty box shown instead. The performer executes this movement as
he is passing to another portion of the audience, to whom he will
explain matters briefly. This passing about the room is highly
essential in concealing many movements, and the conjuror's
actions should be well mapped out beforehand, and not left to
accident. As I am describing the trick, the money should be put
in the box by someone on the conjuror's right. It then becomes
natural for the performer to place the box in his left hand, in
order to exhibit it to those on that side of the room. The
learner will find, as he progresses, how highly important it is
to pay attention to these apparently small, but by no means
insignificant matters.
The performer's motions should balance, as it were; and his great
study should be to make actions that are absolutely indispensable
to him appear to be perfectly natural, if not the only ones that
could be suitable to the occasion.
The empty box is then placed in the fingers of the right hand, in
which the box containing the half-crowns is still concealed. The
performer brings a chair close to the audience, and places upon
it the empty box, first shaking the hand once or twice to show
that the money is still inside. The coins rattling in the hidden
box will appear to be in the one which is really empty. Care must
be taken to keep the back of the hand towards the audience, and
to allow it to hang down considerably, so as to do away with any
possibility of an accidental exhibition of the palmed box.
The performer now proceeds to his table, pocketing the box with
coins as he does so in as noiseless a manner as possible. He then
takes the tumbler in one hand, and, rattling it hard with his
wand all the time, turns it upside down to show that it is empty.
On turning it back again the rattling must be repeated. This
rattling, the reader will readily comprehend, is for the purpose
of covering the slight clinking of the coins that are confined
within. It is a good plan to have a piece of baize or cloth on
the bottom of the tumbler, inside. This will deaden the sound of
the clinking when the tumbler is being replaced upon the table
The performer now returns to the little box, previously getting
the half-crown from the pocket into his palm, and feigns to
abstract one coin from it, the palmed coin being shown. This,
with appropriate explanation, he "passes" into the tumbler, into
which it is distinctly heard to fall. The whole of the coins are,
one by one, abstracted from the box, and made to pass into the
tumbler. The methods of extracting them should be varied. One can
be taken out by means of the wand, another caught in mid-air, the
next be found at the tip of someone's nose, and the next in
somebody else's hair, whilst the last will probably be found
attached either to the performer's elbow or to the sole of his boot. This variety of
movement keeps the audience amused, and, consequently, distracts
their attention, which might, perhaps, be employed in watching
other matters somewhat too narrowly. The same system of variation
should be observed in "passing" the coins, three or four
different passes being brought into use. The last "pass" may be
effectively made with the reverse palm, by the method described
on page 8 for throwing the coin away. The palm can then be shown
perfectly empty, the coin being recovered as the performer
proceeds towards the glass.
The mystery of the coins being heard to fall into the tumbler has
yet to be explained. The explanation is, that the conjuror's
stage assistant is concealed behind the scenes, in a position as
proximate to the tumbler as possible, with another glass and some
coins. The performer and assistant must have an understanding
between them, and when the assistant hears the word given he
drops one coin into the glass, allowing a short time for the
supposed journey. The word "pass" is the one commonly used, and
is the best, for the conjuror is using it all through the
performance, and it does not, therefore, excite any particular
attention. It is as well to vary the speed with which the coins
travel. The first two should occupy from a second and a half to
two seconds in travelling from hand to tumbler. The next the
conjuror should say will take a little longer, it being a very
old coin and, consequently, weak. Five seconds will be quite long
enough for this, and the next can be despatched with the command,
"Presto, pass!" This should arrive at its destination in
half-a-second. If no arrangement on this head has been made
beforehand, the performer must take care to speak loudly and
distinctly. This co-operation of performer and assistant has
already been explained in connection with The Shower of Gold.
Sometimes, with the view, I imagine, of making the trick appear
still more difficult, the tumbler is covered with a
borrowed handkerchief, pocketbook, programme, &c. When this is
done, the assistant must cover his glass with a handkerchief, and
so cause the sound of the falling coins to be muffled. I have
seen an assistant commit an absurd error of using only one coin.
The sound caused by one coin falling upon others in a glass is
very different to that of a coin falling into an empty glass.
The use of the two little boxes in this trick is an idea of my
own. Other conjurors invariably use a box with a hinged lid,
which has a horizontal plate on a level with its upper rim. This
plate has four slits in it, and into each slit is placed a half -
crown. By an exceedingly ingenious mechanical arrangement, a coin
is made to drop into the body of the box each time the lid is
shut down. The performer affects to abstract one in the manner
just described. The chief objection to this box is its great
expense; other-wise, it is a very good piece of apparatus.
Another piece of apparatus that is also frequently used in
conjunction with the trick is what is called the Half-crown Wand.
This is a hollow tin wand, with a sliding piston inside it. One
end is divided into two parts, which are hinged. A half-crown,
that has been cut into three portions, is concealed in this
opening top, and by means of a complexity of hair springs, and
the action of the piston, moved by the thumb from the outside,
the three fragments are pushed out, and, ranging themselves side
by side, cause the appearance of a half-crown on the end of a
wand. All I can say about this piece of apparatus is, that it is
a pity the inventor's ingenuity was not directed towards making
something else. I believe, though, that the article sells well,
as it does away with the last piece of sleight of hand left in
the trick, and so gives lazy people and duffers a chance.
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