SLEIGHTS AND SUBTLETIES.
THE chief requisites for success in the performance of feats of Magic are manual dexterity and self-possession. The former can only be acquired by practice; the latter will be the natural result of a well-grounded confidence. We subjoin a few preliminary hints, of considerable importance to the amateur exhibiter.
1. Never acquaint the company before-hand with the particulars of the feat you are about to perform, as it will give them time to discover your mode of operation.
2. Endeavour, as much as possible, to acquire various methods of performing the same feat, in order that if you should be likely to fail in one, or have reason to believe that your operations are suspected, you may be prepared with another.
3. Never venture on a feat requiring manual dexterity, till you have previously practised it so often as to acquire the necessary expertness.
4. As diverting the attention of the company from too closely inspecting your manœuvres is a most important object, you should manage to talk to them during the whole course of your proceedings. It is the plan of vulgar operators to gabble unintelligible jargon, and attribute their feats to some extraordinary and mysterious influence. There are few persons at the present day credulous enough to believe such trash, even among the rustic and most ignorant; but as the youth of maturer years might inadvertently be tempted to pursue this method, while exhibiting his skill before his younger companions, it may not be deemed superfluous to offer a caution against such a procedure. He may state, and truly, that every thing he exhibits can be accounted for on rational principles, and is only in obedience to the unerring laws of Nature; and although we have just cautioned him against enabling the company themselves to detect his operations, there can be no objection (particularly when the party comprises many younger than himself) to occasionally show by what simple means the most apparently marvellous feats are accomplished.