pages: unmaskingrobert00houdgoog.pdf, 122
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unmaskingrobert00houdgoog.pdf | 122 | THE WRITING AND DRAWING FIGURE So far we have traced only the original writing and drawing figure. This has been done purely to show that even if Robert-Houdin had been capable of building such an automaton, he would not have been its real in- ventor, but would merely have copied the marvellous work of the Jacquet-Drozes. Now to trace the figure which in 1844 he claimed as his invention. With the fame of the Neuchâtel shop spreading and the demand for Swiss watches increasing, Maillardet and Jean Pierre Droz, apprentices or perhaps partners of Pierre Jacquet-Droz and Henri-Louis Jacquet-Droz, removed to London and there set up a watch factory. About this time Maillardet invented a combination writing and drawing figure which was pronounced by experts of the day slightly inferior to the work of the two Jacquet-Drozes. However, it must have been worthy of exhibition, for it appeared at intervals for the next fifty years in the amusement world, particularly in Lon- don. At first Maillardet was not its exhibitor nor was his name ever mentioned on the programmes and newspaper notices, but later his name appeared as part owner and ex- hibitor. As the Swiss watches had created a veritable sen- sation and were snatched up as fast as produced, it is quite likely that he had no time to play the rôle of showman. The figure first appeared in London in 1796, when the London Telegraph of January 2nd carried the adver- tisement reproduced on the next page. Haddock had no particular standing in the world of magic, and it is more than likely that he rented the auto- mata which he exhibited, or merely acted as showman for the real inventors. [ 105 ] |