Page:Hocus pocus, or, The whole art of legerdemain in perfection (1).pdf/9

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your adversaries, with whom they bet, and yet are their confederates.

But in showing 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 stoek, four or five cards from it; hereby you shall seem to work wonders, for it will be easy for you to see one eard, 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 a little behind all the cards lying underneath him, bestowing him, I say, either a little beyond his fellows before, right over, the forefinger, or else behind the rest, so as the little finger of the left hand may meet with it, which is the easier, the readier, aud better way in the beginning of your shuffling. Shuffle as thiek as you ean, and in the end throw upon the stoek the neither 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,) ereep up to meet with the bottom eard and when you feel it, you may then hold it until you have shuffled over the eards again, still leaving your cept eard below. Being perfect herein, you may do almost what you list with eards 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 eurious beholder. As for example, and for brevity sake, to show divers feats under one.