Page 40 Summer, 1994
Juggler's
Secret Revealed! From
Scientific American,. January 1,
1898. Article by W.B. Caulk.
While
watching the clever manner in which
a good juggler passes various articles from hand to hand, how many
people ever give a thought to the many hours of practice devoted to
even the simplest trick that he performs?
To become even a passable juggler, many weary months of constant
practice are necessary. There are tricks in all trades, and some of
the most successful entertainers in this line can scarcely do a half
dozen genuine feats of juggling, yet they are great favorites with the
public. It has been truly said that "the tricks that require the
most practice are the least appreciated by the average
spectator." It is my intention merely to show how a simple trick
has won fame for several well-known jugglers.
This
is the trick of juggling blindfolded. An assistant tightly binds a
heavy handkerchief over the juggler's eyes, and then, to make sure
that he cannot see, there is placed over his head and shoulders a sort
of bag, made of heavy goods, which should exclude all light, even if
his eyes were not
tightly bound with the handkerchief. Regardless of this, the juggler
performs the usual passes with balls and knives. Yet, when the bag is
removed, the bandage over the eyes is found undisturbed.
This
is most simple. The bag is made of the usual coarse bagging, and a few
threads are pulled out of the part that will come in front of the
juggler's face when the bag is over the head, thus allowing him to
see between the remaining threads as though looking through a coarse
screen.
When
the bag is being placed over his head, and during the seeming effort
of passing the arms through the armholes in the bag, the performer or assistant
has no trouble in pushing the handkerchief up from the eyes to the
forehead, thus allowing him to see through the open work of the bag.
In removing the bag after the act there is no trouble in pulling the
handkerchief back down over the eyes. |
The Blindfolded Juggler |