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Title: Hocus Pocus - or The Whole Art of Legerdemain, in Perfection. By which - the meanest capacity may perform the whole without the - help of a teacher. Together with the Use of all the - Instruments belonging thereto.
Author: Dean, Henry
Language: English
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*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Hocus Pocus - or The Whole Art of Legerdemain, in Perfection. By which - the meanest capacity may perform the whole without the - help of a teacher. Together with the Use of all the - Instruments belonging thereto." ***


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HOCUS POCUS; OR THE WHOLE ART OF LEGERDEMAIN, IN PERFECTION. BY HENRY
DEAN.


[Illustration:

 Strange feats are herein taught by slight of hand,
 With which you may amuse yourself and friend,
 The like in print was never seen before,
 And so you’ll say when once you’ve read it o’er.
]



 HOCUS POCUS;
 OR THE WHOLE ART OF
 _LEGERDEMAIN_,
 IN PERFECTION.

 By which the meaneſt capacity may perform the
 whole without the help of a teacher.

 _Together with the Uſe of all the Inſtruments_
 _belonging thereto._

 TO WHICH IS NOW ADDED,
 Abundance of New and Rare Inventions.

 BY HENRY DEAN.

 _The ELEVENTH EDITION, with large_
 _Additions and Amendments._

 PHILADELPHIA:
 PRINTED FOR MATHEW CAREY, NO. 118,
 MARKET-STREET.

 1795.



THE PREFACE TO THE READER.


KIND READER,

Having _in my former_ book _of_ LEGERDEMAIN, _promiſed you farther
improvements, accordingly I have diſcovered herein to you the greateſt
and moſt wonderful ſecrets of this_ ART, _never written or publiſhed
by any man before: therefore I do not doubt but herein you will find
pleaſure to your full ſatisfaction; which is all my deſire_.

 HENRY DEAN.



The Whole ART of LEGERDEMAIN; OR, HOCUS POCUS IN PERFECTION, &c.


Legerdemain is an operation whereby one may seem to work wonderful,
impossible, and incredible things, by agility, nimbleness, and slight
of hand. The parts of this ingenious art, are principally four.

 First, In conveyance of balls.
 Secondly, In conveyance of money.
 Thirdly, In cards,
 Fourthly, In confederacy.


_A Description of the Operation._

1. He must be one of a bold and undaunted resolution, so as to set a
good face upon the matter.

2. He must have strange terms, and emphatical words, to grace and adorn
his actions; and the more to amaze and astonish the beholders.

3. And lastly, He must use such gestures of body, as may take off the
spectators eyes from a strict and diligent beholding his manner of
performance.


_How to pass the Balls through the Cups._

You must place yourself at the farther end of the table, and then you
must provide yourself three cups, made of tin, and then you must have
your black sticks of magic to shew your wonders withal; then you must
provide four small cork balls to play with; but do not let more than
three of them be seen upon the table.

Note. Always conceal one ball in the right hand, between your middle
finger and ring finger: and be sure make yourself perfect to hold it
there, for, by this means, all the tricks of the cups are done.

Then say as followeth.

 _Gentlemen, three cups—’tis true_
     _They are but tin, the reason why,_
 _Silver is something dear._
     _I’ll turn them in gold, if I live, &c._
 _No equivocation at all:_
     _But if your eyes are not as quick as my hands_
 _I shall deceive you all._
     _View them within,_
 _View them all round about,_
     _Where there is nothing in,_
 _There’s nothing can come out._

Then take your four balls privately between your fingers, and so sling
one of them upon the table, and say thus,

 _The first trick that e’er learn’d to do,_
 _Was, out of one ball to make it into two:_
 _Ah! since it cannot better be,_
 _One of these two, I’ll divide them into three,_
 _Which is call’d the first trick of dexterity._

So then you have three balls on the table to play with, and one left
between the fingers of your right hand.


_The Operation of the Cups is thus._

[Illustration]

Lay your three balls on the table, then say, Gentlemen, you see here
are three balls, and here are three cups, that is, a cup for each ball,
and a ball for each cup. Then, taking that ball that you had in your
right hand, (which you are always to keep private) and clapping it
under the first cup, then taking up one of the three balls, with your
right hand, seeming to put it into your left hand, but retain it still
in your right, shutting your left hand in due time, then say, _Presto,
be gone_.

[Illustration]

Then taking the second cup up, say, Gentlemen, you see there is nothing
under my cup; so clap the ball that you have in your right hand under
it, and then take the second ball up with your right hand, and seem to
put it into your left, but retain it in your right hand, shutting your
left in due time, as before, saying, _Verda, be gone_.

[Illustration]

Then take the third cup, saying, Gentlemen, you see there is nothing
under my last cup; then clapping the ball you have in your right hand
under it, then take the third ball up with your right hand, and seeming
to put it into your left hand, but retain it in your right; shutting
your left hand in due time, as before, saying, _Presto, make haste_; so
you have your three balls come under your three cups, as thus: and so
lay your three cups down on the table.

[Illustration]

Then with your right hand take up the first cup, and there clap that
ball under, that you have in your right hand; then saying, Gentlemen,
this being the first ball, I will put it into my pocket; but that you
must still keep in your hand to play withal.

[Illustration]

So take up the second cup with your right hand, and clap that ball you
have concealed under it, and then take up the second ball with your
right hand, and say, this likewise, I take and put into my pocket.

[Illustration]

Likewise, take up the third cup, and clapping the cup down again,
convey that ball you have in your right hand under the cup, then taking
the third ball, say, Gentlemen, this being the last ball, I take and
put this into my pocket. Afterwards say to the company, Gentlemen, by
a little of my fine powder of experience, I will command these balls
under the cups again. As thus,

[Illustration]

So lay them all along upon the table to the admiration of all the
beholders.

Then take up the first cup, and clap the ball you have in your right
hand under it, then taking the first ball up with your right hand, seem
to put the same into your left hand, but retain it still in your right,
then say, _Vade, quick be gone when I bid you, and run under the cup_.

[Illustration]

Then taking that cup up again, and flinging that you have in your
right hand under it, you must take up the second ball, and seem to
put it into your left hand, but retain it in your right hand, saying,
Gentlemen, see how the ball runs on the table.

So seemingly fling it away, and it will appear as thus.

[Illustration]

So taking the same cup again, then clapping the ball under again, as
before, then taking the third ball in your right hand, and seem to put
it under your left, but still retain it in your right, then with your
left hand seem to fling it in the cup, and it will appear thus; all the
three balls to be under one cup.

[Illustration]

And if you can perform these actions with the cups, you may change the
balls into apples pears, or plumbs, or to living birds, to what your
fancy leads you to. I would have given you more examples, but I think
these are sufficient for the ingenious, so that, by these means, you
may perform all manner of actions with the cups.

Note. The artificial cups cannot well be described by words, but you
may have them of me, for they are accounted the greatest secrets in
this art: therefore, I advise you to keep them as such, for this was
never known to the world before.


_How to shew the wonderful_ Magic Lanthorn.

This is the magic lanthorn that has made so much wonder in the world,
and that which Friar Bacon used to shew all his magical wonders withal.

This lanthorn is called magic, with respect to the formidable
apparitions that by virtue of light it shews upon the white wall of a
dark room. The body of it is generally made of tin, and of a shape of
the lamp; towards the back part, is a concave looking glass of metal,
which may either be spherical or parabolical, and which, by a grove
made in the bottom of the lanthorn, may either be advanced nearer or
put farther back from the lamp, in which is oil or spirit of wine, and
the match ought to be a little thick, that when it is lighted, it may
cast a good light that may easily reflect from the glass to the fore
part of the lanthorn, where there is an aperture with the perspective
in it, composed of two glasses that make the rays converge and magnify
the object.

When you mean to make use of this admirable machine, light the lamp,
the light of which will be much augmented by the looking glass at a
reasonable distance. Between the fore-part of the lanthorn, and the
perspective glass, you have a trough, made on purpose, in which you are
to run a long, flat thin frame with different figures, painted with
transparent colours upon glass; then all these little figures passing
successively before the perspective glass, thro’ which passes the light
of the lamp, will be painted, and represented with the same colours
upon the wall of a darkroom, in a gigantic and monstrous manner.

By this Lanthorn you may shew what man, or woman, or birds, or beasts,
and all sorts of fish that are in the sea: so if any gentleman has a
desire to furnish themselves with one of these lanthorns, I have the
best that can be made.

_The figure is as follows._

[Illustration]


_To seem to swallow a long pudding made of tin._

This pudding must be made of tin, consisting of twelve or thirteen
little hoops made as in the figure following, so as they may almost
seem to fall one through another, having little holes made at the
biggest end thereof, that it may not hurt your mouth, hold this pudding
(for so it is called) privately in your left hand, with the hole end
uppermost, and with your right hand take a ball out of your pocket,
and say, ‘If here is ever a maid, that has lost her maidenhead or an
old woman that is out of conceit with herself, because her neighbours
deem her not so young as she would be, let them come to me, for this
ball is a present remedy:’ then seem to put the ball into your left
hand, but let it slip into your lap, and clap your pudding into your
mouth, which will be thought to be the ball that you shewed them; then
decline your head, and open your mouth, and the pudding will slip
down at its full length, which with your right hand you may strike it
into your mouth again, doing this three or four times, then you may
discharge it into your hand, and clap it into your pocket without any
suspicion, by making three or four wry faces after it, as tho’ it stuck
in your throat, and if you practise smiting easily upon your throat
with your fist on each side, the pudding will seem to chink; as if it
were flying there; then say, ‘Thus they eat puddings in High Germany,
they fling it down their throats before their teeth can take possession
of it.’

[Illustration]


_To seem to eat knives and forks._

Desire any one of the spectators to lend you a knife, which when you
get hold of, so that you may cover the whole with both hands, the
end of the haft excepted, and setting the point to your eye, saying,
“Some body strike it with your fist,” but nobody will, because it is so
dangerous a thing; then setting your hand on the side of the table and
looking about you, ask, “What will nobody strike it in?” in which time
let the knife slip into your lap, then make as if you chop it hastily
into your mouth, or to hold it with one hand, and to strike it in with
the other nimbly, making three or four wry faces, saying, “Some drink,
some drink,” or else, “Now let somebody put his finger into my mouth,
and pull it out again,” some will cry, “You will bite me,” say, “I
will assure you I will not:” then when he hath put his finger in, he
will pull it out and cry, There is nothing; this is time sufficient to
convey the knife into your pocket; then say, Why, you have your finger
again: so, by this means, you may swallow knives and forks.


_To put a lock upon a man’s mouth._

You must have a lock made for this purpose, according to the figure;
one side of its bow must be immovable, as that marked with A, the other
side is noted with B, and must be pinned to the body of the lock, as
appears at E, I say it must be pinned that it may play to and fro with
ease; this side of the bow must have a leg as at C, and then turn it
into the lock; this leg must have two notches filled in the inner
side, which must be so ordered, that one may lock or hold the two sides
of the bow as close together as may be, and the other notch to hold the
said part of the bow a proportionable distance asunder, that, being
locked upon the cheek, it may neither pinch too hard, nor yet hold it
so slight that it may be drawn off; let there be a key fixed to it, to
unlock it, as you see at D, and lastly, let the bow have divers notches
filled in it, so that the place of the partition, when the lock is shut
home, will the least of all be suspected in the use of the lock; you
must get one to hold a tester edge long between his teeth, then take
another tester, and with your left hand proffer to set it edge-ways
between a second man’s teeth, pretending that your intent is to turn
both into which of their mouths they shall desire, by virtue of your
words: which he shall no sooner consent to do, but you, by holding your
lock privately in your right hand, with your fore-finger may flip it
over his cheek, and lock it by pressing your fore-finger a little down,
after some store of words, and the lock, having hung on a while, seem
to pull the key out of his nose.

You may have those locks neatly made, at my house, near the
watch-house, on little Tower-hill, Postern-row, a bookseller’s shop.

[Illustration]


_How to shew the magic bell and bushel._

This feat may well be called magical, for really it is very amazing, if
it be well handled. This device was never known to the public before.

This bushel must be turned neatly like unto the egg-boxes, so that they
cannot find out where it opens, and you must have a false lid to clap
on and off; upon that false lid glue some bird-feed, and then you must
have a true lid made to clap neatly upon the false one, now you must
have your artificial bell to shew with your bushel.

You may make your bell with wood or brass, your bell must be made to
unscrew at the top, that it may hold as much seed as your bushel will
when it is filled, and you must have the handle of your bell made with
a spring, so as to let the seed fall down at your word of command.

The manner how to use them is as followeth: Note, you must be sure to
fill the top of your bell with seed before you begin to shew; then
saying, Gentlemen, you see I have nothing in my bell (which they
cannot, if you hold it by the handle) nor have I any thing in my
bushel, therefore I will fill my bushel with seed, and, in filling it,
clap on the false lid, and no man can tell the contrary.

Then ask any body in the company to hold that seed in their hands and
you will command it all under the magical bell; so clap the true lid
on, and then ring your bell, and the seed will be gone out of your
bushel into your bell, to the admiration of all the beholders.

If you cannot rightly conceive this by words, you may have them of the
newest fashions, ready made, at my house.

[Illustration]


_How to put a ring through one’s cheek._

You must have two rings made of silver, or brass, or what you please,
of one bigness, colour, and likeness, saving that one must have a
notch through, and the other must be whole, without a notch; shew the
whole ring, and conceal that which hath the notch, and say, Now I will
put this ring through my check, and privately slip the notch over one
side of your mouth; then take a small stick which you must have in
readiness, and slip the whole ring upon it, holding your hand over it
about the middle of the stick; then bid somebody hold fast the stick at
both ends; and say, see this ring in my cheek, it turns round; then,
while you perceive them fasten their eyes upon that ring, on a sudden
whip it out, and smite upon the stick therewith, instantly concealing
it, and whirling the other ring, you hold your hand over round about
the stick, and it will be thought that you have brought that ring upon
the stick which was upon your cheek.

[Illustration]


_How to shew the Hen and Egg-bag, and out of an empty bag to bring out
above an hundred eggs, and afterwards to bring out a living hen._

[Illustration]

You must go and buy two or three yards of calico, or printed linen,
and make a double bag, and on the mouth of the bag, on that side next
to you, you must make four or five little purses, in which you must
put two or three eggs in a purse; and do so till you have filled that
side next to you; and have a hole made at one end of your bag, that
no more than two or three eggs come out at once; then you must have
another bag, like unto that exactly, that one must not be known from
the other; and then put a living hen into that bag, and hang it on a
hook on that side you stand. The manner of performing it is thus: take
the egg-bag, and put both your hands in it, and turn it inside out, and
say, Gentlemen, you see there is nothing in my bag; and, in turning it
again, you must slip some of the eggs out of the purses, as many as you
think fit, and then turn your bag again and shew the company that it is
empty; and, in turning it again, you command more eggs to come out, and
when all is come out but one, you must take that egg and shew it to the
company; and then drop your egg-bag, and take up your hen-bag, and so
shake your hen, pidgeon, or any other fowl. This is a noble fancy, if
well handled.


_How to cut the blowing book._

Take a book seven inches long, and about five inches broad, and let
there be forty-nine leaves, that is, seven times seven, contained
therein, so as you may cut upon the edges of each leaf six notches,
each notch in depth of a quarter of an inch, with a gouge made for that
purpose, and let them be one inch distant; paint every thirteenth and
fourteenth page, which is the end of every sixth leaf and beginning of
every seventh, with like colours, or pictures; cut off with a pair of
sheers, every notch of the first leaf, leaving only one inch of paper,
which will remain half a quarter of an inch above that leaf; leave
another like inch in the second part of the second leaf, clipping
away an inch of paper in the highest place above it, and all notches
below the same, and orderly to the third and fourth, and so as there
shall rest upon each leaf only one nick of paper above the rest, one
high uncut, an inch of paper must answer to the first directly, so as
when you have cut the first seven leaves in such a manner as I have
described, you are to begin the self same order at the eighth leaf,
descending the same manner to the cutting the other seven leaves to
twenty-one, until you are past through every leaf all the thickness of
your book, &c.

This feat is sooner learn’d by demonstrative means, than taught by
words of instruction; so, if any person wants to be furnished with
these blowing books, they may have them at my shop on Little-towerhill,
aforesaid.


_To shew the trick with the Funnel._

[Illustration]

You must get a double funnel, that is, two funnels soddered one within
the other, so that you may, at the little end, pour in a quantity of
wine or water; this funnel you may have ready filled before-hand, with
whatsoever liquor you please, and call for some of the same kind, then
draw your funnel, and setting your middle finger into the bottom of it,
bid some body, or else do it yourself, pour it full, and drink it up
before them, and turn the broad end of the funnel downwards, saying,
“Gentlemen, all is gone;” and in a trice turn yourself about, and in
turning pronounce some terms of art, withdraw your finger from the
narrow end, and let the liquor cut between the funnels, and it will be
thought to be that which you drank out of the funnel, and so you may
persuade them it is the same.


_How to make three little children dance in a glass upon a table._

[Illustration]

Take little figures of glass that are made hollow, of an inch and
a half high, representing little boys, which may be had at the
glass-blowers; these little images have a small hole in one of their
legs, and are lighter than water; immerge them into the water contained
in the glass A. B. this glass is about a foot or 15 inches high,
and covered with a bladder which is tied fast over the top; a small
quantity of air is to be left between the bladder and surface of the
water; so, when you command them to walk down, press your hand hard
upon the top, and they will immediately come down, and so you may make
them dance in the middle of the glass, at your pleasure; and when you
would have them to go up to the top, take your hand away, and they will
walk up.

I hope this is sufficient for your understanding; if not, you may have
the glass and figures of me.


_Bonus Genius: or Hiccius Doctius._

[Illustration]

You must have the figure of a man made of wood, about the bigness of
your little finger, the head whereof must be made to take off and put
on at pleasure, by means of a wire that is in the neck: also, you must
have a cloth cap with a little bag within to convey the head into;
the bag must be neatly made that it may not easily be perceived: shew
your man to the company, ‘Gentlemen, this I call my Bonus Genius;’
then shew the cap, saying, ‘This is his coat:’ say moreover, ‘Look now
as stedfast as you can, nevertheless I will cozen you, for therefore
am I come;’ then hold your cap above your face, and take your man in
your right-hand, and put his head through the hole of the cap, saying,
‘Now he is ready to go on any message I have to send him, to Spain,
or to Italy, or whether I will, but he must have somewhat to bear his
charges,’ with that, pull out your right-hand from under the cap, and
therewith, the body, but privately putting your right-hand into your
pocket, as if you felt for money, where you may hide the body, and
take out your hand and say, ‘There is three crowns for you, now be
gone,’ then turn the head, and say, ‘But he will look about him before
he goes;’ then say, setting your fore-finger upon his crown, ‘Just
as I thrust my finger down so he shall vanish;’ and therewith by the
assistance of your left-hand that is under the cap, convey his head
into the little bag within the cap, then turn your cap about, and say,
‘See here he is gone;’ then take up your cap and hold it up again,
throwing the head out of the little bag and say, ‘Hic mecus Genius,’
and in the mean time thrust the head through the hole of the cap, and
holding the head by the wire, turn it about presently, and put the head
into your pocket.

 Note. _Any person that is desirous to learn any part of this art, they
 may be taught by me._

 H. Dean.


_Of conveyance of Money._

The conveyance of money is not much inferior to the balls, but much
easier to do; the principal place to hold a piece of money is the palm
of your hand, the best piece to keep is a tester, but with exercise all
will be alike; except the money be very small, and then it is to be
between the fingers, almost at the finger’s ends, whereas the ball is
to be kept below, near to the palm; the money must not be of too large
a circumference.


_To convey money out of one of your hands into the other by_
Legerdemain.

First, you must hold open your right-hand, and lay therein a tester
or some big piece of money, then lay thereupon the top of your long
left finger, and use words; and, upon a sudden, flip your right-hand
from your finger wherewith you hold down the tester still therein, and
suddenly, I say, drawing your right-hand through your left, you will
seem to have left the tester there, especially when you shut, in due
time, your left hand, which, that it may more plainly appear to be
truly done, you may take a knife and seem to knock against it, so as it
may make a great sound; this is pretty, if it is cunningly done, for
both the ear and the eye are deceived by this device.


_To convert money into counters, and counters into money._

Another way to deceive the lookers on is, to do as before with a
tester, and keeping a counter in the palm of your left-hand secretly,
to put the tester secretly thereinto, which being retained still in the
right-hand, when the left-hand is opened, the tester will seem to be
turned into a counter.


_To put one tester into one hand, another into the other hand, and with
words to bring them together._

He that hath once attained to the faculty of retaining one piece of
money in his right-hand, may shew a hundred pleasant conceits by that
means, and may reserve two or three as well as one; and so then you
may seem to put one piece into your left-hand, and retaining it still
in your right-hand, you may together therewith, take up another like
piece, and so, with words, seem to bring both pieces together. Variety
of tricks may be shown in juggling with money.


_To put one tester into a stranger’s hand, and another into your own,
and to convey both into the stranger’s hand with words._

Also, you may take two testers, evenly set together, and put the same
instead of one tester into a stranger’s hand, and then making as though
you did put one tester in your left-hand with words, you shall make it
seem that you convey the tester in your hand into the stranger’s hand;
for when you open your said left-hand, there shall be nothing seen, and
he opening his hand, shall find two testers, which he thought was but
one. By this device, I say a hundred conceits may be shewed.


_How to shew the same, or the like feat otherwise._

To keep a tester betwixt your fingers, serveth, especially for this and
such like purposes; hold out your hand, and cause one to lay a tester
upon the palm thereof; then shake the same up almost to your finger’s
end, and putting your thumb upon it, you shall easily, with a little
practice, convey the edge betwixt the middle and fore-finger, whilst
you proffer to put it into the other hand; provided always that the
edge appears not through the fingers on the backside; which being done,
take up another tester, which you may cause another stander-by to lay
down, and put them both together, either closely, instead of one into
a stranger’s hand, or keep them still in your own hand, and after some
words spoken, open your hands, and there being nothing in one hand,
and both pieces in the other, the beholders will wonder how they came
together.


_To throw a piece of money away, and to find it again where you left
it._

You may with the middle or ring-finger of the right-hand, convey a
tester into the palm with the same hand, and seem to cast it away,
keeping it still, which, with confederacy, will seem strange: to wit,
when you find it again, where another have bestowed the like piece, but
these things without exercise cannot be done; therefore I will proceed
to shew how things may be brought to pass with less difficulty, and yet
as strange as the rest; being unknown, are marvellously commended, but
being known, are derided and nothing at all regarded.


_How to make a groat or tester to leap out of a pot, or run along upon
a table._

You shall see a juggler take a tester and throw it into a pot, or lay
it in the midst of a table, and with enchanting words cause the same to
leap out of the pot, or run towards him, or from him along the table,
which will seem miraculous until you know how it is done; which is
thus, take a long black hair of a woman’s head fastened to the rim of
a tester, by the means of a little hole driven through the same with a
Spanish needle, in like sort you may use a knife, or any small thing,
but if you would have it go from you, you must have a confederate,
by which means all juggling is graced and amended; this feat is the
stranger if it be done by night, and a candle placed between the
spectators and the juggler; for by that means their eyes are hindered
from discerning the conceit.


_To make a groat or a tester to sink through a table, and to vanish out
of a handkerchief strangely._

A juggler also will sometimes borrow a tester and mark it before you,
and seem to put the same into the midst of a handkerchief, and wind
it so as you may the better see and feel it; then will he take the
handkerchief and bid you feel whether the tester be there or not, and
he will also require you to put the same under a candlestick, or some
such like thing; then he will send for a bason of water, and holding
the same under the table right against the candlestick, he will use
certain words of enchantment, and in short you will hear the tester
fall into a bason; this done, let one take off the candlestick, and the
juggler take the handkerchief by a tossel and shake it, but the money
is gone, which seemeth as strange a feat as any whatsoever, but being
known, the miracle is turned to a bauble, for it is nothing else but
to sew a tester into a corner of a handkerchief, finely covered with a
piece of linen a little bigger than your tester, which corner you must
convey instead of the tester delivered to you into the middle of your
handkerchief, leaving the other in your hand or lap, which afterwards
you seem to pull through the table, letting it fall into the bason.


_A notable trick to transform a counter to a groat._

Take a groat, or some lesser piece of money, and grind it very thin at
one side, and take two counters and grind them, the one at one side;
glew the smooth side of the groat to the smooth side of the counter,
joining them so close together as may be, especially at the edges,
which may be so filled as they shall seem to be but one piece, to wit,
one side a counter and the other side a groat, then take a little
green wax for that is softest, and therefore best, and lay it so upon
the smooth side of the counter as if it do not much discolour the
groat, and so will that counter, with the groat, cleave together as
though they were glued, and being filled even with the groat and the
other counter, it will seem so perfect, like an entire counter, that
though a stranger handle it he cannot betray it; then, having a little
touched your fore-finger and the thumb of your right-hand with soft
wax, take therewith this counterfeit counter, and lay it openly upon
the palm of your left-hand, in such sort as if you were to lay down
the counter, wringing the same hard, so as you may leave the glewed
counter, with the groat, apparently in the palm of your left-hand, and
the smooth side of the waxed counter will stick fast upon your thumb,
by reason of the wax wherewith it is smeared, and so you may hide it
at your pleasure always; that you lay the waxed side downward, and
the glewed side upward, then close your hand, and in, or after the
closing thereof, turn the piece, and so instead of a counter, which
they suppose to be in your hand, you shall seem to have a groat, to the
astonishment of the beholders, if it be well handled. The juggler must
not have any of his tricks wanting.


_An elegant feat to make a two-penny piece be plain in the palm of your
hand, and be passed from thence where you list._

Put a little red wax, not too much, upon the nail of your longest
finger, then let a stranger put a two-penny piece into the palm of your
hand, and shut your fist suddenly, and convey the two penny piece upon
the wax, which with use you may so accomplish as no man shall perceive
it; then, and in the mean time, use words of course, and suddenly open
your hand, hold the tips of your fingers rather lower than higher than
the palm of your hand, and the beholders will wonder where it is gone;
then shut your hand suddenly again, and lay a wager whether it be their
or not, and you may either leave it there, or take it away at pleasure;
this, if it be well handled, hath more admiration than any other feat
of the hand. Note. This may be best done by putting the wax upon the
two-penny piece, but then you must put it into your hand yourself.


_To convey a tester out of one’s hand that holds it fast._

Stick a little wax upon your thumb, and take a stander-by, by the
fingers, shewing him the tester, and telling him you will put the same
into his hand, then wring it down hard with your waxed thumb, and using
many words, look him in the face, and as soon as you perceive him to
look in your face, or on your hand, suddenly take away your thumb and
close his hand, and it will seem to him that the tester remaineth; even
as if you wring a tester upon one’s forehead, it will seem to strike
when it is taken away, especially if it be wet; then cause him to hold
his hand still, and with speed put into another man’s hand, or into
your own, two testers instead of one, and use words of course, whereby
you shall make the beholders believe, when they open their hands, that,
by enchantment, you have brought both together.


_To convey a shilling, being in one hand, into another, holding your
hands abroad._

It is necessary to mingle some merry pranks among your grave miracles,
as in this case of money, to take a shilling in each hand, and holding
your arms abroad, lay a wager that you will put them both into one hand
without bringing them any nearer together; the wager being laid, hold
your arms abroad alike a rod, and turning about with your body, lay
the shilling out of one of your hands upon the table, and turning to
the other hand; and so you shall win your wager: a knack more merry
than marvelous.


_To transform any small thing into any other form by folding paper._

Take a sheet of paper, and fold or double the same, so as one side be
a little longer than the other, then put a counter between the two
sides of the leaves of the paper, up to the middle of the top of the
fold, hold the same so as it be not perceived, and lay a groat on the
outside thereof, right against the counter, and fold it down to the
end of the longer side, and when you have unfolded it again, the groat
will be where the counter was; so that some will suppose that you have
transformed the money into a counter; and with this many tricks may be
done.


_Another experiment of the like nature._

Take two papers three inches square a-piece, divided into two folds,
into three equal parts, at either side, so as each folded paper remains
one inch square; then glue the back side of the two together, as they
are folded, and not as they are opened, and so shall both papers seem
to be but one, and which side soever you open, it shall appear to
be the same, if you have handsomely the bottom, as you may well do
with your middle finger, so as if you have a groat in one hand, and a
counter in the other, you having shewed but one, may, by turning the
paper, seem to change it; this may be the best performed by putting it
under a candlestick or a hat, and with words seem to do the feat. This
is no inferior trick.


_Of cards, with good caution how to avoid cozenage therein, especially
rules to convey and handle the cards, and the manner and order how to
accomplish all difficulties and strange things wrought with cards._

I having now bestowed some waste money among you, I will set you to
cards, by which kind of witchcraft a great number of people have
juggled away, not only their money, but also their lands, their health,
their time, and their honesty. I dare not as I could, shew the lude
juggling that cheats practice, least it minister some offence to the
well disposed; to the simple, hurt and losses, and to the wicked,
occasion of evil doing; but I could wish all gamesters to beware, not
only of cards, but also of what dice they play withal; but especially
with whom, and where they exercise gaming, and to let dice pass as a
thing whereby a man must be inevitably cozened: one that is skilful in
making bum cards, may undo hundreds of wealthy men that are given to
gaming; for if he hath a confederate present, either of the players
or standers-by, the mischief cannot be avoided; if you play among
strangers, beware of him that seems simple or drunken, for under their
habit the most specious cozeners are presented, and while you think
by their simplicity and imperfections to beguile them, and thereby
perchance are pursuaded by their confederates, which you take to be
your friends, you will be then most of all deceived; beware also of
the betters and lookers-on, and particularly, of them that bet on your
side, whilst they look on your game without suspicion, they discover
it by signs to your adversaries, with whom they bet, and yet are their
confederates.

But in shewing feats and juggling with cards, the principal point
consisteth in the shuffling them nimbly, and always keeping one card
either at the bottom or in some known place of the stock, four or five
cards from it; hereby you shall seem to work wonders, for it will be
easy for you to see one card, which, though you be perceived to do,
it will not be suspected, if you shuffle them well afterwards: and
this note I must give you, that in reserving the bottom card, you must
always whilst you shuffle, keep him a little before or behind all the
cards lying underneath him, bestowing him, I say, either a little
beyond his fellows before, right over the fore finger or else behind
the rest, so as the little finger of the left hand may meet with it,
which is the easier, the readier, and better way: in the beginning of
your shuffleing, shuffle as thick as you can, and in the end throw upon
the stock the nether card, with so many more at the least as you would
have preserved for any purpose, a little before or a little behind the
rest, provided always that your fore-finger (if the pack lay behind)
creep up to meet with the bottom card, and when you feel it, you may
then hold it until you have shuffled over the cards again, still
leaving your kept card below: being perfect herein, you may do almost
what you list with cards by this means, what pack soever you use,
though it consisteth of eight, twelve, or twenty cards, you may keep
them still together unserved next to the card, and yet shuffle them
often to satisfy the curious beholders. As for example, and for brevity
sake, to shew divers feats under one.


_How to deliver out four aces, and to convert them into four knaves._

Make a pack of these eight cards, to wit, four knaves and four aces,
and although the eight cards must be immediately together, yet must
each knave and ace be evenly set together, and the same eight cards
must lie also in the lowest place of the bunch, then shuffle them so
always at the second shuffling, or, at leastwise, at the end of your
shuffling the said pack, one ace may lay undermost, or so as you may
know where he goeth and lieth always: I say, let your aforesaid pack,
with three or four cards more, lie unseparable together; immediately
upon, and with that ace; then using some speck, or other device, and
putting your hands with the cards to the edge of the table, to hide
the action, let out privately a piece of the second card, which is
one of the knaves, holding forth the stock in both your hands, and
shewing to the standers-by the nether card, which is the ace, or kept
card, covering also the head or piece of the knave, which is the next
card, and with your fore-finger draw out the same knave, laying it
down on the table; then shuffle them again, keep your pack whole, and
so have your two aces lying together in the bottom; and to reform that
disordered card, and also to grace and countenance that action, take of
the uppermost card of the bunch, and thrust it into the midst of the
cards, and then take away the nethermost card, which is one of your
said aces, and bestow him likewise; then may you, being as before,
shewing another ace, and instead thereof lay down another knave and so
forth, until, instead of your aces, you have laid down four knaves,
the beholders all this while thinking that there lies four aces on the
table, are greatly amused, and will marvel at the transformation: you
must be well advised in shuffling of the bunch lest you overshoot
yourself.


_How to tell one what card he seeth at the bottoms when the card is
shuffled in the stock._

When you have seen a card privately, or as though you marked it not,
lay the same undermost, and shuffle the cards as before you are taught,
till your card be again at the bottom; then shew the same to the
beholders, bidding them to remember it; then shuffle the cards, or let
any other shuffle them, for you know the card already, and therefore
may at any time tell them what card they saw, which nevertheless must
be done with caution, or shew of difficulty.


_Another way to do the same, having yourself never seen the cards._

If you can see no card, or be suspected to have seen that which you
mean to shew, then let a stander-by shuffle, and afterwards take you
the cards into your hands, and having shewed them, and not seen the
bottom card, shuffle again, and keep the same cards, as before you are
taught; and either make shift then to see it when their suspicion is
past, which may be done by letting some cards fall or else lay down all
the cards in heaps, remembering where you laid the bottom card; then
espy how many cards lie in some one heap, and lap the slap where your
bottom card is, upon that heap, and all the other heaps upon the same,
and so if there were five cards in the heap, whereon you laid your
card, then the same must be the sixth card, which now you must throw
out or look upon without suspicion, and tell them the card they saw.


_To tell without confederacy, what card he thinketh on._

Lay three cards at a little distance, and bid a stander-by be true and
not waver, but think on one of the three, and by his eye you shall
assuredly perceive which he thinketh: and you shall do the like if you
cast down a whole pack of cards with the faces upwards, whereof there
will be few or none plainly perceived, and they also court cards: but
as you cast them down suddenly, so must you take them up presently,
marking both his eyes, and the card whereon he looketh.


_How to make a card jump out of the pack, and run on the table._

This is a wonderful fancy if it be well handled: as thus,

Take a pack of cards, and let any one draw any card that they fancy
best, and afterward take and put it into the pack, but so as you know
where to find it at pleasure; for by this time, I suppose you know how
to shuffle the cards, and where to find any card when it is put into
the pack; then take a piece of wax, and put it under the thumb nail of
your hand, and then fasten a hair to your thumb, and the other end of
the hair to the card, then spread the pack of cards open on the table,
then say, “If you are a pure virgin the card will jump out of the
pack,” then by your words or charms seem to make it jump on the table.


_How to tell what card any man thinketh on, and how to convey the same
into a kernel of a nut or cherry stone, and the same again into one’s
pocket; and how to make him draw the same, or any card you please, and
all under one device._

Take a nut, or a cherry stone; and burn a hole through the side of the
top of the shell, and also through the kernel if you will, with a hot
bodkin, or bore it with an awl, and with a needle pull out the kernel,
so as the same may be as wide as the hole of the shell: then write the
name of the card in a piece of fine paper, and roll it up hard, then
put it into the nut or cherry stone, and stop the hole up with wax, and
rub the same over with a little dust, and it will not be perceived;
then let some stander-by draw a card, saying, ‘It is no matter what
card you draw;’ and if your hands so serve you to use the card well,
you shall proffer him, and he shall receive the same card that you have
rolled up in the nut; then take another nut and fill it up with ink,
and then stop the hole up with wax, and then give that nut which is
filled with ink, to somebody to crack, and when he finds the ink come
out of his mouth, it will cause great laughter. By this feat on the
cards, great wonders might be done.


_How to let twenty gentlemen draw twenty cards, and to make one card
every man’s card._

Take a pack of cards, let any gentleman draw a card, and let him put it
in the pack again, but be sure that you know where to find it again at
pleasure; then shuffle the cards as before taught, and then let another
gentleman draw a card, but be sure that you let him draw no other but
the same card as the other did draw, and so do till ten or twelve or
as many cards as you think fit; when you have so done, let another
gentleman draw another card, but not the same, and put that card into
the pack where you have kept the other card, and shuffle them till you
have brought both the cards together; then shewing the last card to the
company, the other will shew the trick: By this means many other feats
may be done.


_How to change a pack of cards into all manner of pictures._

[Illustration]

You must take a pack of cards and paint upon the back-side of one half
of the pack what manner of figures that please your fancy best, as men,
women, birds, flowers, &c. Then paint the other half, of the cards,
viz. on that side where the spots are on, after the same manner you did
the other half, so between them both, you will have a compleat pack of
all pictures; and when you will perform this trick, you must shew the
cards but half-way. This is one of the best tricks on the cards; and
you may have them ready made at my house.


_How to knit a knot upon a handkerchief, and to undo the same with
words._

Make one plain loose knot with the two corner ends of a handkerchief,
with seeming to draw the same very hard, hold fast the body of the
said handkerchief, near to the knot, with your right hand, pulling the
contrary end with your left hand, which is the corner of that which you
hold; then close up handsomely the knot, which will be somewhat loose,
and pull the handkerchief so with your right hand as the left hand end
may be near to the knot, then will it seem to be a true and firm knot;
and to make it appear more assuredly to be so, let a stranger pull at
the end which you have in your left hand, while you hold fast the other
in your right hand, and then holding the knot with your fore-finger and
thumb, and the lower part of your handkerchief with your other finger,
as you hold a bridle, when you would with one hand slip up the knot
and lengthen the reins; this done, turn, your handkerchief over the
knot with the left hand, in doing whereof you must suddenly slip out
the end or corner, putting up the knot of your handkerchief with your
fore-finger and thumb, as you would put up the aforesaid knot of your
bridle: then deliver the same covered and wrapt within the midst of the
handkerchief to one to hold fast, and after pronouncing of some words
of art, take the handkerchief and shake it, and it will be loose.


_How to take three button moulds off two strings._

[Illustration]

Take two little whipcords of two feet long a-piece, double them equally
so as there may appear four ends; then take three button moulds, the
hole of one of them must be bigger than the rest, and put one button
mould upon the eye or bout of the one cord and another on the other
cord, then take the button mould with the greatest hole, and let both
the bouts be hidden therein; which may be the better done if you put
the eye or bout of the one into the eye or bout of the other; then pull
the middle button upon the same, being doubled over his fellow, so
will the heads seem to be put over the two cords, you may loose them
as you list, and make it seem manifest to the beholders, which may
not see how they are done, but that the buttons are put upon the two
cords without any fraud; then must you seem to add a more effectual
binding of those buttons to the strings, and make one half of a knot
with one of the ends of each side, which is for no other purpose, but
that when the buttons be taken away, the cords may be seen in the case,
which the beholders supposes them to be in before; for then you have
made your half knots, which in any wise you may not double to make a
perfect knot, you must deliver into the hands of some stander-by these
two cords, namely, two cords evenly set to one hand, and two in the
other, and then with a wager begin to pull off the buttons, which if
you handle nimbley, and in the end cause him to pull his two ends,
the two cords will shew to be placed plainly, and the buttons to have
come thro’ the cords; but those things are so hard, and long to be
described, that I will leave them, whereas I could shew greater variety.



READER,


I have promised you to write something of confederacy, that when you
see or hear some fancy done, you shall be no stranger to it, but know
how to do it as well as any juggler in England, for by confederacy
mighty wonders are wrought, which seem incredible and impossible. Some
will ask for what reason I do write these things and set them forth in
such a manner, for they say, we know them already; my answer is, if
you do, every one does not; therefore slight not simple things, for you
that seem to be so cunning and so wary may be imposed on and deceived:
what would an ingenious person give, or how far would he go to learn
secrets? I myself would have gone twenty miles to have learnt the worst
fancy in this book; I would have you take it in good part, and so I
proceed to the chapter.


_To cure the tooth-ach._

This must be done by confederacy, I won many a pint of wine by it; you
must pretend you are grievously troubled with the tooth-ach, making wry
faces and pretending a great deal of pain; then says your confederate,
I will undertake to cure you in a quarter of an hour, it is a plain
but a very safe and easy way, he then takes a thimble full of salt,
puts it into a piece of paper, then says he, Hold this to your cheek on
that side the pain lies, and it will be gone. You shaking your head at
him, asking him, if he can find none to make sport with but you that
are not disposed; he then proffers you to try his receipt, which, with
seeming unwillingness take and hold it to your cheek a small time, then
he will ask you if you find ease, you spitting much, say, Yes, truly I
find it much abated; then he will say, to perfect it, lay down your
paper upon the table, step into the yard and wash your mouth with a
spoonful of cold water: Now (says he to the company, in your absence)
You may see what conceit does, I will take out the salt, and put in
the like quantity of ashes in the paper; laying it twisted as before
in its place, then he coming in, takes up the paper again, and puts it
into his mouth as before, the company will be laughing and fleering as
tho’ you are ignorant, then privately convey the ashes away with the
paper and another paper of salt like the former, as you must have in
readiness as before, hold to your cheek, your confederate asking you,
Well, what think you now? Why, indeed one would not have thought to
have had so soon an alteration in a little; then will one or another
say in company, Why, do you think you have salt in your mouth? Yes, I
saw it taken out of the box; he will lay you a wager presently, that it
is not salt, when by opening the paper, his folly is discovered, with
no small sport to the company.


_To know if it be a head, or woman, and the party to stand in another
room._

This likewise is done by confederacy, he that lays it down, says, What
is it? and that is a sign it is a head; for he says, What is it now,
and that is a sign it is a woman: cross and pile in silver is done the
same way. By confederacy divers strange things are done; as to make
a man, by muttering some words, to pull off his cloaths, and so dance
naked; thus you may throw a piece of money into a pond, and bid a boy
go to such a secret place where you have hid it, and he will bring it,
and make them believe it is the same that you threw into the pond, and
no other.

So let a confederate take a shilling and put it under a candlestick on
a table at a good distance from you, then you must say, Gentlemen, you
see this shilling, then take your hand and knock it under the table,
and convey it into your pocket: then say, The shilling is gone, but
look under such a candlestick and you will find it.


Fortunatus’ _wishing post, or how to make any person dance naked_.

This feat is more for pastime than any thing else.

You must go and get you a post of about five or six inches long, and
you must then get it turned hollow throughout, so that you may have a
screw made just fit, and then put a needle at each end of the screw,
and have two holes so contrived in the post that you may fasten two
strings in the screw, so as when you pull one end of the string, the
needle will run into your finger, and when you pull hold of the other
end of the string, the needle will run into your thumb, which will
cause great laughter to the campany. If these words are not sufficient
for you to make one by, you may have them at my house ready made.


_To seem to cut a hole in a cloak, scarf, or handkerchief, and with
words to make it whole again._

To do this you must have a piece of the same ready in your hand, the
sample of that you intend to cut; then amongst other tricks by you,
clap your hand upon the place you intend to cut, then drawing hollow by
the false piece, cause it to be cut off, and gripping your hand, shew
the hole from whence the piece came away, which is in your hand, which
is done by pretending to feel in your pocket for a needle and thread to
sew it up again: but drawing your hand out from your pocket, saying, I
have no needle, but I have a charm will do as well; so muttering some
words, bid them blow upon it, and pulling your hand from the place,
does not a little satisfy the curiosity of the persons which thought
they had been damnified.


_The Egg Box is looked upon to be as good a trick and as cunning a
slight, as any that is done, but because it cannot be expressed in
words, I have put these figures underneath to explain it._

[Illustration]

A, signifies the egg box, made in the fashion of two bee-hives put
one upon another; B, the upper shell; C, the inner shell, covered
over artificially with the skin of an egg; P the lower part of the
shell-box; putting B, which is the outward shell, upon C, and both upon
P, as it stands, makes the box perfect. To do this trick, call for an
egg, then bid all standers-by look on it, and see that it is a real
egg, setting the box on the table, upon the foot C, take off the upper
part, B, C, with your fore-finger and thumb, then placing the egg in
the box, say, You see it fairly in, and uncovering it again, likewise
say, You shall see me fairly take it out, putting it into your pocket
in their sight; open your box again and say, There is nothing, close
your hand about the middle of your box, and taking B, by the bottom,
say, There is the egg again, which appears to the spectators to be;
so clapping that in again, and take the lid of C, in your finger and
thumb, say, There it is gone again.

This feat is not for a bungler to shew.


_To make a room seem to be all on fire, mighty dreadful to behold._

Take sal armoniack half an ounce, camphire one ounce, aqua vitæ two
ounces, put them into an earthen pot, in the fashion of a chamber-pot,
but something narrow upon the top, then set fire to it, and the room
will seem to them that are in to be all on fire; nay, themselves will
slap their hair and clothes thinking they are all on fire, when there
is no body hurt, unless it be with fright. Have a care of shewing it to
women with child in the room, for yourself would be frighted if you did
not know the trick.


_How to eat fire, and to blow it up in your mouth with a pair of
bellows._

[Illustration]

Anoint your tongue with liquid-storax, and you may put a pair of tongs
into your mouth red hot, without hurting yourself, and lick them till
they are cold, by the help of this anointment, and by preparing your
mouth thus, you may take wood coal out of the fire, and eat them as
you would bread, dip them into brimstone-powder, and the fire will
seem more strange, but the sulphur puts out the coal, and shutting
your mouth close puts out the sulphur, and so they champ the coals and
swallow them, which they may do without offending the body; but if
they were bound to eat nothing else, it would be a very sickly trade;
and if you put a piece of lighted charcoal into your mouths you may
suffer a pair of bellows to be a blowing in your mouth continually, and
receive no hurt, but your mouth must be quickly cleaned, otherwise
it will cause a salivation; it is a very dangerous thing to be done,
and although those that practise it, use all the means they can to
prevent danger, yet I never saw any one of these fire eaters that had a
good complexion, the reason I could give, but it is known to the sons
of art: some put bole-armoniack into this receipt: a cold thing, and
spoils the whole composition, and so leaves out hamitatis and liquid
storax; but let them beware how they use it.


_How to walk on a hot iron bar, without danger of scalding or burning._

Take half an ounce of camphire, dissolve it in two ounces of aqua vitæ,
add to it one ounce of quick-silver, one ounce of liquid storax, which
is the droppings of myrrh, and hinders the camphire from firing, take
also two ounces of hamitatis, a red stone to be had at the druggists,
and when you buy it, beat it to powder in their great mortar, for it is
so very hard, that it cannot be done in a small one; put this to the
afore-mentioned composition, and when you intend to walk on the bar,
you must anoint your feet well therewith, and you may walk over without
danger: by this you may wash your hands in boiling lead.


_How to make a knife leap out of a pot._

[Illustration]

When you are in company, and intend to make mirth, have a pot full of
water standing on a table, then take a piece of whale-bone about three
inches long, let it be pretty stiff, it will spring the better; take
also a new stiff card, and fold it down the middle long-ways, cut a
hole through both folds at each end, half an inch or more from the
ends, put one end of the whale-bone in at one end of the card, bend it
like a bow, then put the other end of the whale-bone into the other
end of the card, set this into the pot, with two inches or more deep
in water, then place the handle of your knife upon the uppermost part
of the whale-bone, with the point upwards: use some words of art, as
Presto vet, or Omporte.

Note, I have invented a new instrument to perform this fancy, which is
to be admired by all ingenious persons.


_The melting-box._

[Illustration]

This melting box is another artificial slight, which is shewn as above,
made in the fashion of a screw, that so the lips may hang without
discovery; as thus, F is the out-part of the box; G the first in-part.
H the second in-part; I a round case made of plush or leather, with
a button on the top, and wide enough to slip on and off, half in the
bottom of the box, F put a small quantity of quick-silver killed, which
may be done with the shavings of pewter, or fasting spittle; in the
second part, which is H, let there be six single pence, put these in
the first or out-most part, then put G to H, and the box is perfect.

When you go to shew this trick, desire any in the company to lend you
a sixpence, and you will return it safe again; but requesting withal,
that none will meddle with any thing they see, unless you desire them,
lest they prejudice you and themselves; then take the cup off the box,
and bid any one see it and feel it, that there may be no mistrust, so
likewise take the box entire, holding your fore-finger on the bottom,
and your thumb on the upper part, turning it upside down, say, You see
here is nothing; then putting in the sixpence, put the cup over the
box again; as the box stands covered upon the table, put your hand
under the table, using some canting words, then take off the cup with
your fore-finger and thumb, so as you pinch the innermost box with it,
and set it gently on the table; then put the killed quicksilver out
of lower part into your hand, turning the box with the bottom upward
and stirring it about with your finger, ‘Here you see it melted, now I
will put it in again and turn it into six single pence;’ suddenly take
the cap as you took it off, returning it again, bid them blow on it;
then take off the cap as you did before, only pinching the uppermost
lid in it, and setting it upon the table, hold the box at the top and
bottom with your fore-finger and thumb, then put the six single pence,
after they are viewed and seem to be so, in again, and return the cap
as before, saying, Blow on it if you would have it in the same form
you gave it me, then taking the cup by the button, holding the box as
before, put out the six-pence and return the box into your pocket. This
is a very good slight, if well performed, which is done by often use.


_How to light a candle by a glass of cold water, or other liquor,
without the help of fire._

You must take a little piece of phosphorus, about the bigness of a
pin’s head, and with a piece of tallow, stick it on the edge of the
drinking-glass, and then take the candle lighted and blow it out;
and apply it to the glass, it will immediately light. This is the
preparation that Cromwell used to fire off his cannon withal, very
amazing to behold; you may write with it on a paper, some horrible
words or other, and it will appear frightful to the beholders: also,
you may take a piece as big as a pin’s head, and rub it on a piece of
paper, and it will be soon all on a flame.


_A trick upon the globe-box._

[Illustration]

This is a trick not inferior to the best that is shewn with boxes; it
is a box made of four pieces, and a ball so big as is imagined to be
contained therein: the ball serves in the same nature, as the egg does
in the egg box, only to deceive the hand and eye of the spectators.
This ball, made of wood or ivory, is thrown out of the box upon the
table, for everyone to see that it is substantial, then putting the
ball into the box, and letting the standers-by blow on the box, taking
off the upper shell with your fore-finger and thumb, there appears
another, and of another colour, as red, blue, yellow, or any variety of
colours upon each ball that is so imagined to be, which indeed is no
more than the shell of wood ingeniously turned and fitted for the box,
as you may see in the figures above.

L, the out-shell of the globe taken off the figures; M, N, an inner
shell; O, the cover of the same; P, the other inner shell; Q, the cover
of the same; R, the third shell; S, that which covers it. These globes
may be made with more or less varieties, according to the desire of the
practitioner.


_To tell the names of all cards in the pack, before you see them._

Take a pack of cards, and after you have shuffled them, or let another
shuffle them, lay them down upon the table before you, with their backs
uppermost, then say, ‘Now I will tell you the names of all the rest of
the cards in the pack, except one, before I see them;’ having said so
draw off the uppermost cards, and say, ‘This is my Hocus Pocus. This
is he by whose assistance I shall discover all the rest of the cards
in the pack; I care not what he is, for I can make any of them serve
for the same purpose.’ Then put him to your mouth, as tho’ you charmed
him, and repeat some cramp words; and taking off the next card from the
pack, say, Here is the —— naming your Hocus Pocus, and having seen him,
lay him down.


_How to hold four kings in the hand, and by words to seem to transform
them into four aces, and afterwards to make them all blank cards._

You shall see a juggler take four kings in his hand, and apparently
shew you them, then after some words and charms, he will throw them
down upon the table, taking one of the kings away, and adding but one
other card, then taking them up again, and blowing upon them, will
shew you them transformed into blank cards, white on both sides, then
throwing them down as before, with their faces downwards, will take
them up again, and blowing upon them, will shew you four aces. This
trick, in my mind, is not inferior to any of the rest, and being not
known, will seem very strange to the beholders, and yet after you know
it, you cannot but say the trick is pretty. Now to do this feat, you
must have cards made for the purpose, half cards we may call them;
that is one half kings and the other half aces, so laying the aces one
over the other, nothing but kings will be seen, and then turning the
kings downwards, the four aces will be seen; but you must have two
whole cards, one a king, to cover one of the aces, or else it will be
perceived; and the other an ace, to lay over the kings, when you mean
to shew the aces; then, when you would make them all blank, lay the
cards a little lower and hide the aces, and they will appear all white.
The like you may make of four knaves, putting upon them the four fives;
and so of the other cards.


_To tell or name all the cards in the pack, and yet never see them._

To do this, you must first privately drop a drop of water or beer about
the bigness of a two-pence upon the table before you, were you sit,
then rest your elbows upon the table so as the cuffs of your sleeves
may meet, and your hands stick up to the brims of your hat; in this
posture your arms will hide the drop of water from the company; then
let any one take the cards and shuffle them, and put them into your
hands; also let them set a candle before you, for this trick is best
done by candle light, then holding the cards in your left hand, above
the brim of your hat, up close to your head, so as the light of the
candle may shine upon the cards, and holding your head down; so in the
drop of water, like a looking-glass, you shall see the shadow of all
the cards before you; draw then the fingers of your right-hand along
upon the cards, as though you felt the spots, name the cards, and then
lay him down. Thus you may lay down all the cards in the pack, one by
one, naming them before you lay them down, which will seem very strange
to the beholders, who will think that you have felt them out.


_To shew one what card he taketh notice of._

Let any man take a card out of the pack, and note him: then take part
of the pack in your hand, and lay the rest down upon the table; bidding
him lay his noted card upon them; then turning your back towards the
company, make as though you were looking over the cards in your hand,
and put any card at the fore-side; and whilst you are doing this
privately, wait the cards being laid out in heaps, to find what the
bottom cards are. Bid any one take four cards of the same number, viz.
4 aces, 4 duces, 4 trays, 4 fours, or any other number not exceeding
10, (for he must not take court cards) and lay them out; then take the
remaining cards (if any such there be) and divide their number by 4,
and the quotient shall be the number of spots of the 4 card: if 12
cards remain, then on each bottom card ware trays, and if there be no
remaining cards, then the four bottom cards are four aces.


_To tell the number of spots on the bottom cards, laid down on several
heaps._

Bid any one take the whole pack of cards in his hand, and having
shuffled them, let him take off the upper card, and having taken notice
of it, let him lay it down upon the table with his face downwards, and
upon it let him lay so many cards, as will make up the number of the
spots on the noted card, 12 e. g. If the card which the person first
took notice of, were a king, queen, or knave, or a single ten, bid him
lay down that card with his face downwards, calling him ten, upon that
card let him lay another, calling him eleven, and upon another, calling
him twelve; then bid him take off the next uppermost card, saying, what
is it? Suppose it were a 9, and laying it down on another part of the
table, calling him 9, upon him lay another card, calling him 10, and
upon him another, calling him 11, and upon him another, calling him 12;
then let him look on the next uppermost card, and so let him proceed to
lay them up in heaps, in all respects as before, till he has laid out
the whole pack; but if there be any odd cards at the last, I mean, if
there is not enough, to make up the last noted card 12, bid him give
them to you; then to tell him the numbers of all the spots contained in
all the bottom cards of the heaps, do thus, from the number for heaps
subtracted 4, and multiply the remainder by 12, and to the product add
the numbers of those remaining cards, which he gave you, if any remain,
but if there were but four heaps, then those remaining cards alone,
shew the number of spots sought.

Note, That you ought not to see the bottom cards of the heaps, nor
should you see them laid out, or know the number of cards in each heap,
it suffices if you know the number of heaps, and the number of the
remaining cards, if any such there be; and therefore you may as well
perform this feat standing in another room as if you were present, you
must have a whole pack.


_To make any two cards come together, which any body shall name._

When any one has named what two cards he would have brought together,
take the cards and say, Let us see whether they are here or not, and if
they are, I will put them as far asunder as I can; then having found
the two cards proposed, dispose them in the pack, and cause them to
come together.

This trick would seem much more strange, when you have brought the
proposed cards together, by laying them in heaps, you lay the heap
wherein the proposed cards are at the bottom of the pack, and then
shuffle the cards, cut them asunder somewhere in the middle, so the
proposed cards will be found together in the middle of the pack, which
will seem very strange to beholders.


_How to make a cat draw a fellow through a pond of water._

To perform this, you must place the fellow on one side of the pond,
and the cat on the other, then take a strong rope and tie about the
fellow’s middle, and the other end of the rope tie to the cat, and then
have the rope to reach farther behind some tree, and there let two
lusty fellows have hold of the rope, and when the wager is laid, then
whip the cat, whilst the two fellows behind the tree pull as hard as
they can.


_How to burn a thread, and to make it whole again with the ashes._

It is not one of the worst tricks to burn a thread handsomely and make
it whole again, the manner whereof is this: take two threads or small
laces, of one foot length a piece, roll up one of them round, which
will be then about the bigness of a pea, put the same between your
left fore-finger and your thumb, then take the other thread, and hold
it forth at length betwixt your fore-finger and thumb of each hand,
holding all your fingers daintily, as young gentlewomen are taught
to hold up a morsel of meat; then let one cut asunder the same thread
in the middle; when that is done, put the tops of your two thumbs
together, and so shall you, with less suspicion, receive the piece
of thread which you hold in your right-hand, into your left, without
opening of your left finger and thumb; then holding those two pieces
as you did before it was cut, let these two be also cut asunder in the
midst, and they conveyed again as before, until they be very short, and
then roll all those ends together, and keep that ball of thread before
the other in the left hand, and with a knife thrust the same into a
candle, where you may hold it until the said ball of thread be burnt
to ashes; then pull back the knife with your right-hand, and leave the
ashes with the other ball betwixt your fore-finger and thumb of your
left hand together, take pains to rub the ashes till your thread be
renewed, and draw out that thread at length which you had, all this
while, betwixt your fore-finger and thumb. This is not inferior to any
juggler’s trick, if it be well handled, for if you are so perfect in
Legerdemain, as to bestow the same ball of thread and to change it from
place to place, betwixt your other fingers, as may be easily done, then
it will seem very strange.


_To cut a lace asunder in the middle, and to make it whole again._

By a device not much unlike the former, you may seem to cut asunder any
lace that hangs about one’s neck, or any point, girdle or garter, and
with a sham conjuration to make it whole, and close it together again:
for the accomplishment whereof, provide if you can, a piece of the lace
which you mean to cut, or at least a pattern like the same, one inch
and a half long, and keeping it double privately in your left-hand,
betwixt some of your fingers, near to the tips thereof, take the other
lace which you mean to cut still hanging about one’s neck, and draw
down your said left-hand to the bout thereof, and putting your own
piece a little before the other, the end or rather middle whereof, you
must hide betwixt your fore-finger and thumb, make the eye, or bout
which will be seen of your own pattern; let a stander-by cut the same
asunder, and it will be surely thought that the other lace is cut;
which with words and fretting, you shall seem to renew, and make whole
again. This if it be well handled, will seem miraculous.


_How to pull innumerable ribbons out of your mouth, of what colour you
please._

As for pulling ribbons out of your mouth, it is somewhat a stale jest,
whereby jugglers get money from maids by selling laces by the yard,
putting into their mouth one round bottom, as fast as they pull out
another, and at the exact end of every yard they tie a knot so as the
same rests upon their teeth, they then cut off the same, and so the
beholders are double and treble deceived, seeing as much lace as will
fill a hat, and the same of what colour you list; to be drawn so by
even yards out of your mouth, and yet the juggler to talk as though
there were nothing in his mouth.


_To draw a cord through your nose, mouth, or head, so sensible, as it
is wonderful to see._

[Illustration]

There is another juggling knack which they call the bridle, being
made of two elder sticks, through the hollowness thereof is placed a
cord, the same being put on the nose like a pair of tongs or pincers,
the cord which goeth round about the same being drawn to and fro, the
beholders will think the cord goes through your nose, very dangerously;
the knots at the end of the cord, which do stay the same from being
drawn out of the stick, may not be put at the very top, for that must
be stopped up, but half an inch beneath each end, and so, (I say) when
it is pulled, it will seem to pass through the nose, and then you may
take a knife and seem to cut the cord asunder, and pull the bridle from
your nose.


_To thrust a bodkin into your forehead without hurt._

[Illustration]

Take a bodkin so made as the haft being hollow, the blade thereof may
slip thereinto as soon as you hold the point upward, seem to thrust it
into your forehead, and so with a little spunge in your hand, you may
bring out blood or wine, making the beholders think the blood or wine
(whereof you may say you have drunk very much) runneth out of your
forehead; then after shewing some countenance of pain and grief, pull
away your hand suddenly, holding the point downward, and it will fall
so out, as it will seem never to have been thrust into the haft, but
immediately thrust that bodkin into your lap or pocket, and pull out
another plain bodkin like the same, saying that conceit.


_How to thrust a bodkin through your tongue._

[Illustration]

Make a bodkin, or a nail, which is all one; the blade thereof being
sundered in the middle, so as the one part be not near to the other,
by almost three quarters of an inch, each part being kept asunder with
one small bout or crooked piece of iron, of the fashion described
before, then thrust your tongue betwixt the aforesaid space, to wit,
into the bout left in the bodkin blade, thrusting the said bout behind
your teeth, and biting the same, it shall seem to stick so fast in, and
through your tongue, that one can hardly pull it out. Also you must
have another bodkin or nail, just like unto the false one, to serve to
shew to the company.


_How to cut your arm off, a pitiful sight, without hurt or danger._

[Illustration]

You must provide yourself with two knives, a true one, and a false one,
and let them be so alike, that no one can tell one from the other, so
when you go to shew this feat to the company, put the true knife into
your pocket, and then take out the false one and clap it on your wrist
undiscovered, and with a spunge make the knife bloody, and it will seem
so much the more strange.


_How to kill any fowl, but especially a pullet, and with words to give
it life again._

Take a hen or chicken, and thrust a nail, or a sharp pointed knife,
through the midst of the head thereof, the edge towards the bill, so as
it may seem impossible for her to escape death, then use some words,
and pulling out the knife, lay oats before her, and she will eat and
live, being nothing at all grieved or hurt with the wound, because the
brain lieth so far behind in the head, as it is not touched, though you
thrust your knife between the comb and it; and after you have done
this, you may convert your speech and actions to the grievous wounding,
and present recovery of your own self.


_To thrust a piece of lead into your eye, and to drive it about with a
stick between the skin and flesh and forehead, until it be brought to
the other eye, and there thrust out._

Put a piece of lead into one of the nether lids of your eye, as big as
a tag of a point, but not so long, which you may do without danger,
and with a little juggling stick, one end thereof being hollow, seem
to thrust the like piece of lead under the other eye-lid, but convey
the same, indeed, into the hollowness of the stick, the stopple or peg
thereof may be privately kept in your hand until this feat be done,
then seem to drive the said piece of lead, with the hollow end of the
slick from the same eye, and so with the end of the said stick being
brought along upon your forehead to the other eye, you may thrust out
the piece of lead, and then shove it out of the eye; and some put it
into both, but the first is the best; this is easily done, howbeit,
being cleanly handled, it will deceive the sight of the beholders.


_To make the constable catch the knave._

Take a pack of cards, and look out the four knaves, lay one of them
privately on the top of the pack, and lay the other three down on
the table, saying, here you see are three knaves got together, about
no good you may be sure; then lay down a king beside them, saying,
But here comes the constable and catches them together; Oh, (says he)
have I caught you together? well, the next time I catch you together,
I will punish you severely for all your rogueries. Oh, but (say they)
you shall not catch us together again in haste for they conclude to
run three several ways: Well, I will go here, (says one) so take one
of the knaves and put him at the top of the pack: And I will go here,
(says another) so put him at the bottom, Then I will go here, (says the
other) so put him in the middle: nay, (says the constable) if you run,
I will make sure of one, so I will follow the first, then take the king
and put him at the top, and let any one cut the cards asunder two or
three times, then deal, cut the cards one by one, and you shall find
three knaves together, and the constable with them.

Note, This feat would be best done with a pack of cards that has two
knaves of that sort, of which you put one in the middle.


_To seem to change a card into a king or queen picture._

To do this, you must have the picture in your sleeve, and by a swift
slight return the card, and fetch out the picture with a back bending.
The manner of doing this is better learnt by frequent trials than can
be taught by many words; but if you would do this feat, and yet hold
your hand straight, and unmoved, then you must peel off the spots or
figures of a card, as thin as you can, and just stick it on the picture
with something that will make it stick a little, then having shewed
the spots or figure of the card, you may draw it off, and roll it up
with your thumb, into a very narrow compass, holding it undiscovered
between the inside of the thumb and the ball of your fore-finger, and
so produce the picture, to the admiration of the beholders.


_To seem to turn a card into a live bird._

Take a card in your hand, and shew it fairly to the company, bidding
them seriously observe it, then having a live bird in your sleeve, turn
your hand on a sudden, drawing the card into your sleeve dexterously
with your thumb and little finger, and giving a hard shake, the bird
will come out or your sleeve into your hand, which you may produce, and
then let fly, as you think convenient, and it will cause wonder in the
spectators.


_Three or four cards being laid down, to tell any one which of those
cards he touched._

This feat is done by confederacy, in this manner; take and lay down,
with their faces upwards, 3 cards, which may be an ace, a four, and
a five, then go out of the room, but let your confederate stay and
see which card was touched, then when any one has touched a card, let
them call you into the room again, and if he touch the ace, let your
confederate say, I will lay a penny that you cannot tell which card he
touched; and if he touched the four, let him say, I will lay a groat,
and if he touched the five, let him say, I will lay you a crown you
cannot tell which card he touched; so by your confederate’s discourse,
you will know which card he touched, nevertheless, you must pretend to
find him out by smelling to them, as though the touch of his finger had
left a scent on the card.


_To tell one what card he took notice of._

Take any number of cards, as 10, 12, and then holding them with their
backs toward you, open four or five of the uppermost, and as you hold
them out to their view, let any one note a card, and tell you, whether
it be the first, second, or third from the top, but you must privately
know the whole number of those cards you took; then shut up your cards
in your hands, and take the rest of the pack and place upon them; then
knock their ends and sides upon the table; so it will seem impossible
to find the noted card, yet it may easily be done thus: subtract the
number of the cards you held in your hand from 52, the whole number of
the cards in the pack, and to the remainder add the number of the noted
card; so the same shall be the number of the noted card from the top:
therefore take off the cards one by one, smelling to them, till you
come to the noted card.


_How to let a gentleman hold ten pieces of money in his hand, and to
command them unto what number he can think on._

You must fling your money on a table, and desire any body to tell ten
pieces out on the table, when they have done they will say, there is
ten. Note, you must have in readiness, privately concealed in your
right-hand, five pieces, then you must tell the company that you always
tell your money after every person, so telling down the money with your
left-hand, and taking it up with your right, convey the five pieces to
the ten, then ask if any body is desirous to hold them, and there will
be enough to hold them, and be sure to hold them fast; that done, bid
them to call for what number they please to think on between 10 and
15, and so let them call for what number they will, you know they have
it in their hand, and when they open their hand, they are struck to
admiration. But be sure not to forget your terms of art to amaze the
beholders.


_To thrust a dagger into your guts, very strangely, and to recover
immediately._

Another miracle may be shewed, touching counterfeit executions, namely,
that with a dagger you shall seem to kill yourself, or at the least
make an irrevokable wound in your belly, as in truth not long since
a juggler caused himself to be killed at a tavern in Cheapside, from
thence he went presently into St. Paul’s church-yard, and there died;
which misfortune fell upon him thro’ his own folly, as being drunk, and
forgetting his breast-plate, which he should have had for his defence.
The device is this, you must prepare a pasteboard to be made according
to the fashion of your belly and breast, the same must be by a painter,
well coloured cunningly, not only like to your flesh, but with paps,
navel, hair, &c. so as the same being handsomely trussed unto you, may
shew to be your natural belly; then next to your true belly you may
put a linen cloth, and thereupon a double plate, which the juggler
that killed himself forgot; over and upon the which, you may place the
false belly; provided always, that betwixt the plate and the false
belly, you place a gut of blood, which blood must be of a calf, or of
a sheep, but in no wise of an ox, or cow, for that will be too thick,
then thrust, or cause to be thrust into your breast a dagger, so far as
it may pierce thro’ you, which being pulled out a good distance from
you, especially if you strain your body to swell, and thrust therewith
against the plate. You must ever remember to use words, countenance,
and posture, such a grace as may give a grace to the action, and move
admiration to the beholders. Prize this as a valuable secret.


_How to cut a man’s head off, and to put the head into a platter, a
yard from his body._

[Illustration]

This is a noble action if it be well handled by a skilful hand. To
shew this feat of execution, you must cause a board, a cloth, and a
platter to be purposely made, and in each of them to be made holes fit
for a body’s neck, the board must be made of two planks, the longer and
broader the better, there must be left within half a yard of the end of
each plank half a hole, so as both the planks being thrust together,
there may remain two holes like to the holes in a pair of stocks, there
must be made likewise a hole in the cloth, a platter also must be set
directly over or upon one of them, having a hole in the middle thereof,
of the like quantity, and also a piece cut off the same, so big as his
neck, through which his head may be conveyed into the middle of the
platter, and then sitting, or kneeling under the board, let the head
only remain upon the board, in the frame; then to make the sight more
dreadful, put a little brimstone into a chaffing-dish of coals, setting
it before the head of the boy, who must gasp two or three times so as
the smoke may enter his nostrils and mouth, which is not unwholesome,
and the head presently will appear stark dead; if the boy set his
countenance accordingly, and if a little blood be sprinkled on his
face, the sight will be the stranger. This is commonly practised with a
boy instructed for that purpose, who being familiar and conversant with
company, may be known as well by his face, as by his apparel; in the
other end of the table, where the like hole is made, another boy of the
bigness of the known boy must be placed; having on his usual apparel,
he must lean or lie upon the board; and must put his head under the
board through the said hole, so as his body shall seem to lie on the
one end of the board, and his head shall lie in a platter in the other
end. There are other things which might be performed in this action,
the more to astonish the beholders, which, because they require long
descriptions, I omit; as, to put about his neck a little dough kneaded
with bullocks blood, which, being cold will appear like dead flesh, and
being pricked with a sharp round hollow quill, will bleed, and seem
very strange, and many rules are to be observed herein; as to have the
tablecloth so long and so wide as it may almost reach the ground. Note,
suffer not the company to stay too long in the place.


_To seem to turn water into wine._

Take four beer glasses, rub one in the inside with a piece of allum,
let the second have a drop of vinegar in it, the third empty, and then
take a mouthful of clean water, and a clean rag, with ground brasil
tied close in it, the bulk may be no bigger than a small nut, which
must lie betwixt your hind teeth, and your cheek, then take of the
water out of the glass into your mouth, and return it into the glass
that hath the drop of vinegar in it, which will cause it to have the
perfect colour of sack; then turn it into your mouth again, and chew
your rag of brasil, and squirt the liquor into the glass, and it will
have the perfect colour and smell of claret; returning the brasil into
its former place, take the liquor into your mouth again, and presently
squirt it into the glass you rubbed with allum, and it will have the
perfect colour of mulberry wine.

[Illustration]


_To make sport with an egg._

If you are drinking in company, or otherwise, that you are disposed to
make sport; have ready a penny-worth of quick-silver, in a quill sealed
at both ends with good hard wax, then cause an egg to be roasted or
boiled, and take off a small bit of the shell of the narrow end, then
thrust in your quill of quick-silver, and lay the egg on the ground;
you shall have sport enough, for it will never leave tumbling about as
long as there is any heat in it.

So likewise if you put quick-silver in a sheep’s bladder and blow it
up, and when you have a mind to have sport, then go to the fire and
warm the bladder, and fling it on the ground, and it will jump and skip
about for a long time, and make all the company laugh, and think the
bladder is bewitched.


_To fetch a shilling out of a handkerchief._

To do this, you must have a ring of wire, such a one as you generally
hang your keys upon, but less, or a curtain ring will do, so as it is
no bigger than a shilling, then take a handkerchief, and put therein
a shilling, twisting the handkerchief round, the form of the shilling
will appear, then say, That you may be certain it is here, I will shew
it you once more, that you may be sure it is in here, and taking out
the shilling, convey the round wire into the handkerchief, which being
twisted, will seem to be the shilling; the better to deceive, you may
wrap the edge of the wire with your stick, then open the wire, draw
it out, and produce the shilling which you have in the palm of your
right-hand, saying, gentlemen, look you here is the shilling, you held
the handkerchief very fast; in the mean time ask, who gave me this
shilling? he who you had it of will soon answer, I, then thank him for
it, saying, it is more than I have had given me this two days.


_To cause the beer you drink, to be wrung out of the handle of a knife._

To do this, you must have a small piece of spunge with drink put in
it privately, then unseen, place this behind your right-ear, but
let not the spunge be too big or too full of liquor, least you be
discovered; then taking a knife, stick it with the handle upwards
in a table or stool, but observe when you go about these sports, to
place your company before you, then bid them look, saying, ‘There you
see is nothing of wet, either upon the handle, or upon the table’;
so stretching your empty hand towards your ear, darting the point,
saying, ‘Now some body cross my arm,’ and speaking some powerful words,
as Jubio Bisco, then have you a fair opportunity to take this spunge
into your hand, from behind your ear, and stretching forth your hand,
squeeze it gently, and, after a little, harder, which makes it run the
faster, to the amazement of the company, saying, thus could I do till I
had drown’d you all; sprinkle a little in their faces, which will cause
them to shut their eyes, whilst you convey away your spunge.


_How to make it freeze by the fire-side._

This feat can be done or performed only in winter, and at such times
as snow may be had, and he that will shew it, must have in readiness,
a handful of salt: the time serving, and the party being provided, let
him call for a joint-stool, a quart pot, a handfull of snow, a little
water, and a short staff; first let him pour a little water upon the
stool, and upon it let him set the quart-pot, and put the snow into the
pot, the salt also, but privately, then let him hold the pot fast with
his left hand, and therewith churn the snow and salt in the pot, as if
one would churn for butter, and in half a quarter of an hour the pot
will freeze so hard to the stool, that you can scarcely with both hands
pull it off from the stool.


_To cut glass, a famous invention._

You must have a piece of well dried match-cord, light it that it may
have a good coal, then take a beer-bowl glass, and hold the match to
the edge of the glass, have your finger ready wet, and when the glass
as very hot, clap your finger to the hot place, and it will suddenly
crack about a quarter of an inch downward, then keep the coal of the
match the like distance from the end of the crack, and as it follows,
so move your hand and cut it screw-fashion, otherwise it will not hold
together, till you have it through the bottom, or like waves; when you
have done it, and that is cold, as that it will be, take it by the
foot, and turn it downwards, it will stretch so, that you may put your
finger betwixt each cutting, then turn it up again, you may drink a
glass of beer in it, and not spill a drop.

[Illustration]


_How to make two bells come into one hand, having put into each hand
one._

This feat must be performed with three bells, you must put one in your
left sleeve, then put one bell into one hand, and another into the
other hand; they must be little maurice bells; withdraw your hand, and
privately convey the bell in your left hand into your right hand, then
stretch both your hands abroad, and bid two men hold your hands fast,
but first shake your hand and say, Do you hear them? the bell that is
in your sleeve will not be known by the rattling, but that it is in
your hands, then say, he now that is the greatest whore-master of you
both shall have none at all; open your hands and shew them, and it will
be thought you deal by magic art.


_How to make a sheet of paper called Trouble-wit._

This is called Trouble-Wit, or Puzzle-Wit, which you please to call
it, and indeed it is a very fine invention, by folding a sheet of
paper as that, by art, you may change it into many several forms or
fashions, take a sheet of marble Paper, fold it down the middle of the
sheet long ways, when you have so done, turn down the edge of each fold
outwards, the breadth of a single penny; then measure it as it is so
folded into three equal parts with compasses, which makes six divisions
in the sheet, let each third part be turned outward, and the other in
course will fall right; then pinch it a quarter of an inch deep, in the
manner as you pinch paper lanthorns, that is, in plaits like a ruff,
so that when the paper lies pinched in its form, it is in the fashion
represented by the figure A; when closed together like the figure
B; unclose it again, and shuffle it with each hand, it resembles the
shuffling of a pack of cards: close it, and take each corner inward
with your fore-finger and thumb, it resembles a rose for a lady’s
shoe, as is seen in the figure C, stretch it forth into the same form,
and it resembles the cover for an Italian couch, as is shewed by the
letter D; let go your fore-finger, at the lower end, and it resembles a
wicket to a gate, or a portal to a nobleman’s door, as is shewed by the
letter E; close it again, and pinch it at the bottom, spreading it on
the top, and it is the fashion of a screen. For as it is shewed by the
letter F. Pinch it half way, and open the top, and it is in the fashion
of a shoe-maker’s cutting knife, which is shewn by the letter G;
holding of it in that form, and with the thumb of your left-hand, turn
out the next fold, and it is in form of a curry-comb, as it is shewed
by the letter H. So that those who are resolved to learn to comb, do
this feat, innocent, and diverting enough, both in city and country.

[Illustration]

[Illustration]

And I would have shewn more of the cuts, but that here is enough
for the ingenious, since they have the manner of folding the paper,
which is a great help to do it: the next fashion is a buttrice, such
as farriers use to pair their horses heels withal; in the fashion of
a lawyer’s desk; in the fashion of a bridge made of wood to carry a
troop of horse over a river: in the fashion of a dark lanthorn: in the
fashion of a bough-pot; in the fashion of a lanthorn with a rose at
each end: in the fashion of a minced-pye, without any meat in it; in
the fashion of a cardinal’s cap; in the fashion of a coster-monger’s
cap; in the fashion of a sugar dish; and many more knacks to be played
with it.


_To make sport in company._

When you are in company, and shewing your tricks, and that you have
done as many as you can, or think to do at this time, then say, to
conclude, I will shew you the best and cleverest trick that ever I did
shew in all my life; not only shew you, but learn it you, that you may
do it yourself another time. The trick is this: how to set a glass of
brandy on the other side of the table, and to make it come jumping and
never touch it.

First, fill a glass of brandy, and put it on the farther end of the
table, and have in readiness the crown of your hat blacked, then say
to the company, gentlemen, whatever you see or hear, I desire you to
say nothing; for this is done by the black art; now I desire every one
of you to change hats one with another, and do as I do, and say as I
say; now you must all turn the crowns of your hats towards your faces,
and so speak as I do, saying, John of Basket; John of Basket! then rub
your face, and he that hath your blacked hat, will laugh because the
glass doth not move, and the others will laugh at his black face; and
so you will make sport enough, then you must speak two or three bold
words to the glass; as thus: glass of brandy, glass of brandy, come to
me, if you will not, I will fetch you, and so take it up with your hand
and drink it, then seem to fling the glass up against the cieling, and
break it, and it will seem very strange. I have done this often.


_How to command seven half-pence through a table._

This feat is one of the greatest that the jugglers have done, and is
inferior to none. To do this, you must go to some tinman, or any body
that knows how to make your holes room enough for a die to go in and
out, and then let them clap a good half-penny upon them all, and so
make them fast, and nobody can tell them from real ones; then you must
get a cap to cover your half-pence, a cap and a die for the company to
fling to amuse them; when you are thus provided with half-pence, a cap,
and a die, the manner of performance is thus: desire any body in the
company to lend you seven half-pence, telling them that you will soon
return them their own again; then say, gentlemen, this is made just
fit for your money; then clapping your cap on, desire somebody in the
company to fling that die to see what they can fling, and in so doing,
take off the cap and convey your false money into the cap, so that the
company may not see you put it in, then with your cap cover the die, so
with your right-hand take up the true money, and put it into the left
under the table, saying, Vada, begone, I command the die to be gone,
and the money to come in the place; so take up the cap, and the die is
gone, and the money is come, covering the money again with the cap, so
taking the true money in your right-hand, and knocking under the table,
making a jingling as though the money was coming through the table,
then flinging then on the table, say, there is the money, and with your
right-hand take off the cap, saying, and there is the die; so convey
the false money into your lap, and there is the cap likewise. This is
an ingenious feat if well handled, here make the figure of a die, and
the fashion of seven half-pence, and a cap to cover them.


_How to turn a box of bird-seed into a living bird._

You must have a box made on purpose, with a false lid; for to describe
it to you in words, is pretty hard, but you may have them ready made
at my house. This box must be turned nearly like unto the egg-boxes,
so that they cannot find out where it opens, and you must have a false
lid to clap on and off, and on that lid glew some bird seed; so before
you shew the box, to the company, put a bird in the box, and then the
false lid, then shew the box to the company, and it will seem to be
full of seed, then say to the company, ‘gentlemen you see my box is
full of seed;’ which nobody can tell to the contrary, then put your
true lid on, saying, Gentlemen, I will command all the seed out of my
box, and command a living bird to appear; so taking off the covers the
bird will appear. You may be furnished with all manner of instruments,
cups, Dutch puddings, egg-boxes, globe-boxes, melting-boxes,
sixpenny-boxes, bird-boxes, and bells and bushels.


_How to command a sixpence out of a box._

You must go and get a box turned of box-wood or any other wood which
you fancy; you must have it turned with two lids, one must be a false
one, and there put a counter, so that it may rattle; and you must
have a small pegg, or button, to your box, to hinder the counter from
jingling, and at the bottom of the box, which you have neatly turned,
there you must have a half notch made in your box, just fit for a
sixpence to come out. So to perform this feat, you must desire any body
to lend you a sixpence, and to mark it with what they please, then let
them put it into the box themselves, afterwards then put the cover on,
then by shaking the box, the sixpence will come into your hand; then
you may dispose of it as you know how when you are shewing your feats.
This feat is not inferior to any that is shewn with boxes.

Note, This box you may have of me ready made in the new fashion.


_How to call for any card in the pack._

Take the cards and shuffle them, or let any body else shuffle them,
or lay down the whole pack on the table before you, with their faces
downwards, then drawing off the upper card say, Here I call for the
card of good luck; and when you have seen what that card is, which you
must do as privately as you can, and be sure not to let the company see
him, then say, Here I call for ——, naming your card of good luck, and
so take the next uppermost card, and then having seen him, say, Here
I call for the ——, naming the card you took up last, and so take off
the next uppermost card, and thus still calling for the card you last
took up, you may call for as many as you please; or, if you will, you
may thus go round the pack, and, in the mean time, cause one to write
down the names of the cards, in the same order as you call for them,
which they may do in brief, thus by writing a figure for the number of
the spots, as 1 for the ace, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and so to ten; and then kn.
for the knave, q. for queen, and kg. for king, adding a letter for
the suits viz. c. for clubs, s. for spades, h. for hearts, and d. for
diamonds, e. g. is three or four cards; suppose the three first cards,
called for, were, the ace of clubs, the tray of spades, and the five
of diamonds, they be set down thus, 1 C——3 S—5 D, and so of any other:
having thus gone round, with as many as you please, take them from the
table, saying, Look now in your paper, see which card I call for first,
which second, and which third, &c. and whilst he is looking, do you
flip the card of good luck under the bottom of the pack, then holding
the cards with their faces upwards, take them off one by one, and they
will come in the same order as you called them, only the last card will
not be set down in the paper, and it must be pretended he was the card
of good luck.


_Another way to call for a card._

After having privately seen the uppermost card, lay the cards down in
three or four heaps, but not above, then begin at the heap farthest off
from you, that has the known card on the top, and say, Here I call for
the ——, naming the known card; then go to the next heap, saying, Here I
call for the ——, naming the card you took up last; proceed in the same
manner, viz. still naming the card you last took up, till you come to
the last heap, so the card you call for first, will come last; but here
note, you must keep the cards close that they may not be seen till you
have done calling, and then you must lay them down, one by one, in the
same order as you called them.


_To tell one what card any one thinketh on._

Take 21 cards, and begin to lay them down, three in a row, with their
faces upwards, then begin again at the left-hand, and lay one card upon
the first, and soon the right hand, and then begin at the left-hand
again and so go on to the right, do this till you have laid out the 21
cards in three heaps, but as you are laying them out, bid any one think
on a card, and when you have laid them all out, ask him in which heap
his card is in, then lay the card in the middle betwixt the other two;
then lay them all out again into three heaps, as before, and as you lay
them out, bid him take notice where his noted card goes; when you have
laid them all out, ask him in what heap it is now? put that heap in
the middle as before, and lay out the cards a third time, bidding him
take notice where his noted card goes, and put that heap in the middle
as before; then taking the cards with their backs towards you, take
off the uppermost card, smelling to him, reckon him 1, then take off
another, and smelling him, reckon him 2, this do till you come to the
eleventh card, for that will always be the noted card, after the third
time of laying them out, though you should lay in this manner ever so
often; you must never lay out the cards less than three times, but as
often above as you please. This trick may be done by any odd number of
cards that may be divided by three.


_Another way to tell one what card is noted._

When one has noted a card, take it and put it at the bottom of the
pack, then shuffle the cards till it come again to the bottom; then
see what is the bottom card, for it is the noted card, which you may
do without being taken notice of; thus, when you have shuffled the
cards, turn them with their faces towards you, and nock their ends
upon the table, as though you would knock them level; and whilst you
are so doing, take notice of the bottom card, which you may do without
suspicion, especially having shuffled them before; then when you know
the card shuffle them again, and give them to any of the company, and
let them shuffle them, for you know the card already, and may easily
find it at any time.


_How to make a card jump out of an egg._

[Illustration]

To do this wonderful feat, you must have two sticks made, both of one
bigness, and both of a likeness, so that no person can know one from
the other; one of the sticks must be made so artificially as to conceal
a card in the middle, as thus: you must have one of your sticks turned
hollow quite through, and then an artificial spring to throw the card
in the egg, at your pleasure; the operation is thus: take and peel any
card in the pack, which you please, and so roll it up, and then put
it into your false stick, and there let it be till you have occasion
to make use of it; then take a pack of cards, and let any body draw a
card, but be sure let it be the same sort of card that you have in the
stick already; then let them put it in the pack again, and when you are
shuffling them, let that card fall into your lap, which the party drew,
so calling for some eggs, desire that party that drew the card, or any
person else in the company, to choose any one of these eggs, and when
they have chosen one, ask them if there be any thing in it, and they
will answer no; then take the egg in your left-hand, and your false
stick in your right, and so break the egg with your stick, and then
let the spring go, and the card will appear in the egg, very amazing to
the beholders; then conceal that stick and produce the true one upon
the table.


_How to make the fountain of command._

You may contrive this fountain of what figure you will.

Take a vessel A. B. which has two bottoms, this is close on all sides
like a drum; through the middle of it run a long pipe, C. D. sodered
to the lower bottom at F, with its two ends open, C. D. the first of
which C. must not quite touch the uppermost bottom, but leave passage
for the water; when one has a mind to fill the vessel A. B. which is
done by turning up the vessel A. B. with its pipe C. D. so that the
hole D. will then be the uppermost, and pouring in the water at D. this
done, stop up the pipe C. D. with another, and a very little smaller
pipe E. D. that can just enter it, and is fixed in the bottom of a case
or cistern that is a little longer than one of the two bottoms of the
vessel A. B. the two pipes C. D. ought to have at an equal height, two
appertures or holes I. I. and the smallest D. E. ought to be movable
within the greater, C. D. that so you may turn the smaller with its
case G. H. when you will, fill the two holes I. I. meet farther the
vessel A. B. ought to have several little holes in its lower bottom, as
K. L. for giving egress to the water, and the case or receptacle G. H.
ought likewise to have smaller vent, M. N. for the water to run out.
Now the vessel A. B. being filled with water as we directed but now,
and the pipe C. D. being stopt by the pipe D. E. which is supposed so
thin, that it could just fill it without any necessity of the extremity
E. it reaching to the end C. provided the other two ends D. D. do but
fit: is it done, I say, turning the vessel again to its first position,
in which it will stand as in the figure, the case G. H. being its base,
and being turned together with its pipe E. till the two vents I. I.
meet and make but one orafice, for then the water contained in the
vessel A. B. will run out at the vents K. L. as long as the air can
pass through the apperture I. to supply the room of the water that runs
A. B. into the case G. H. but when the water in the receptacle G. H.
rises above the vent I. which will infallibly happen, since more water
runs at the vents K. L. than at M. N. the former being supposed to be
larger than the latter, the air not finding access at I. the water in
the vessel A. B. will give over running through the vents K. L. but
the water in the receptacle G. H. will continue to run at the vents M.
N. so that this water will grow lower by degrees, till the vent I. is
uncovered again, and then the air having access at I. will renew the
flux of the water thro’ K. L. which in a small time will raise the
water in the case G. H. so as to recover the vent I. again, upon which
the stream A. B. will stop, and so on alternately, till there is no
water in the vessel A. B.

This is called the fountain of command, because it runs at a word, when
the water is near the renewal of its flux, thro’ the vents K. L. which
is easily known; for when the vent I. begins to get clear of water in
G. A. the air struggling for access at the vent makes a little noise,
and so gives notice that the fountain is about to run. This is a merry
device.


_To seem to kill a horse, and to cure him again._

Take the seed of henbane, and give it the horse in his provender, and
it will cast him into such a deep sleep, that he will seem dead; and if
you will recover him again, rub his nostrils with vinegar, and he will
be revived again.


_A very strange trick, whereby you may seem to cut a piece of tape into
four parts, and make it whole again with words._

[Illustration]

Take a piece of narrow white tape, about two or three yards long, first
present it to view to any that may desire it; then tie both the ends
of it together, and take one side of it in one hand, and the other in
the other hand, so that the knot may be about the midst of one side,
and using some circumstantial words to beguile your spectators, turn
one hand about towards yourself, and the other from you, so shall you
twist the tape once; then clap the ends together, and then if you slip
your fore-finger and thumb of each hand between the tape, almost as one
would hold a skane of thread to be wound, this will make one fold or
twist, as appears where A signifieth the twist or fold; B the knot;
then in like manner make a second fold, about the line D. C. as you
may see by the second figure, where B. signifieth the knot, C. the
first fold, A. the second fold: hold then the fore finger and thumb
of your left hand upon the second twist and upon the knot also, and
the fore-finger and thumb of your right hand upon the first fold C.
and desire some one of your spectators to cut all asunder with a sharp
knife, at the cross line E. D. when it is cut, hold still your left
hand, and let all your ends fall, that you hold in your right hand, for
there will be a shew of eight ends, four above and four below, and so
the strings will be thought to be cut into four parts, as may be seen
by the third figure; then gather up the ends that you let fall into
your left hand, and deliver two of the ends, (seeming to take them at
random) unto two several persons, binding them to hold them fast, still
keeping your left hand fingers upon the twists or folds; then with your
right and left hands seem to tumble all the ends together that you had
in your left-hand, twist out the slips or pieces, which are three, as
you may see at A. and B. in the third figure, twist them all I say,
into a little ball, and conceal it between some of your fingers of your
left hand, and crumble thereon another confused heap, and after some
words said, with your right-hand deliver this confused heap unto any
one of the company, biding him hold it fast, Hulla, Passa, then bid
them look on it, who while they are greedily looking after the event,
you with ease convey the ball or roll of ends into your pocket; so it
will be thought that you have made it whole by virtue of your words. An
excellent trick if it be gracefully handled; and a trick that cost me
trouble to find.


_A device to multiply one face, and make it seem to be a hundred or a
thousand._

[Illustration]

This feat must be performed by a looking-glass made on purpose, the
figure whereof I have fully described, with the manner of making it,
which is this; first make a hoop, or phillet of wood, horn, or such
like, about the width of a half crown piece in the circumference; the
thickness of this hoop, or phillet, let it be about a quarter of an
inch; in the middle of this hoop fasten a bottom of wood or brass,
and bore in a decent order, divers small holes, about the bigness of
small pease, then open the one side of this bottom, set in a piece of
crystal-glass, and fasten it in the hoop close to the bottom, then take
a quantity of quick-silver, and put so much into the hoop as will cover
the bottom; then let into the hoop another piece of chrystal-glass
fitted thereto and cement the sides, that the quick-silver may not
run out, and it is done; the figure whereof I have before set. A.
presenteth the one side that giveth the form of one face to the
beholders? B the other side that multiplieth the beholder’s face so oft
as there are holes in the middle bottom. The use whereof I shall not
insist upon, since he that is versed in the former feats will better
conceive of himself to use it, than my words can either direct or
assist him.


_To make the fulminating thundering powder._

Take three parts of salt-petre, two parts of salt of tarter, and one
part of sulpher, pounded and mixed together, heat in a spoon sixty
grains of this composition, and it will fly away with a fearful noise,
like thunder, as loud as a cannon, breaking through the spoon and every
thing underneath it, for it exerts itself downwards, contrary to the
nature of gun-powder.

       *       *       *       *       *

I have here set down, KIND READER, not only all usual feats, that
either myself have seen or heard of, but divers others also, which I am
sure were never in print, nor as yet performed by any I could ever hear
of except myself, and all to give thee thy full content; and note this
from me, if you rightly understand this, there is not a trick that any
juggler in the world can shew thee, but thou shalt be able to conceive
after what manner it is performed.


FINIS.


Printed by R. Folwell, No. 33, Arch-street.



TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE

Original spelling and grammar have been generally retained, with some
exceptions noted below. Original small caps are now uppercase. Italics
look _like this_. The transcriber produced the cover image and hereby
assigns it to the public domain. Original page images are available
from the Library of Congress, at https://lccn.loc.gov/90101687.

Page 5. The illustration under “The Operation of the Cups is thus”
is retained as originally printed, with the numerals flipped 180°
horizontally. The numerals in the illustration of the “pudding” on page
12 are also flipped.

Page 12. Right single quotation mark inserted after “before their teeth
can take possession of it.”

Page 22. “hole in on of their legs” to “hole in one of their legs”.

Page 24. Right single quotation mark inserted after “look about him
before he goes;”.

Page 27. “hundred conciets may be shewed” to “hundred conceits may be
shewed”. Also, “beholders will wonder bow they came” to “beholders will
wonder how they came”.

Page 30. “you lay the waked side downward” to “you lay the waxed side
downward”.

Page 47. Unbalanced left parenthesis removed from “mouth as before,
(the company will be laughing”.

Page 60. In “kings away, and adding but one other card, then taking
them up again, and blowing upon them, will shew you them transformed
into blank cards, white on both sides,”, the “one” was originally
printed “on”, and “on” was originally “one”.

Page 61. Comma is removed from original “put them into your hands; also
let, them”.

Page 89. One “city” removed from “and diverting enough, both in city
city and country”.

Page 93. Single quotation mark removed from “gentlemen you ‘see my box
is full”.

Page 105. One “put” removed from “quantity of quick-silver, and put put
so much”. Also “qnick-silver” to “quick-silver”.





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