pages: unmaskingrobert00houdgoog.pdf, 189
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unmaskingrobert00houdgoog.pdf | 189 | THE UNMASKING OF ROBERT-HOUDIN "Two ELEGANT AUTOMATA "As large as nature, the one representing a beautiful POLONNESE, the other a little boy. "Nothing can surpass the admirable construction of these Pieces. The large figure seems almost endowed with human Faculties, exhibiting the usual feats of a Rope-Dancer, in the fullest limitation of life. The small Figure is invested with equally astonishing powers of action. To such ladies as are spectators it must be a very pleasing circumstance that these exertions do not excite those disagreeable sensations which arise from the sight of Figures fraught with life, performing feats attended with so much danger." By referring to page II3 the reader will find a Schmidt programme, dated 1827, on which the figure is featured as follows: "THE ROPE DANCER, "Whose surprising performances surpass, in agility, attitudes, and evolutions, every Professor of the art, keep- ing correct time to the music of the machinery." A Gyngell programme, dated 1823, which is reproduced in the chapter devoted to "The Pastry Cook of the Palais Royal," page I25, reads as follows: "Two automatons, one of which will execute wonderful feats on the tight rope, and the other dance a characteristic hornpipe." As Gyngell figured in the amusement world from 1788 to 1844, the little figure must have been tolerably well known to the magic-loving public of England by the time Robert-Houdin appeared in London in 1848. A magician named York, who appeared in London in [172] |