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MIRACLE-MONGERS AND THEIR METHODS

who won the name of a second Samson by a series of feats of strength that to the people of that day seemed little short of superhuman. Dr. Desaguliers, in his Experimental Phllosophy, gives the following account of Joyce and his methods.

About thirty years ago one Joyce,[1] a Kentish man, famous for his great strength (tho' not quite so strong as the King of Poland, by the accounts we have of that Prince) shewed several feats in London and the country, which so much surprised the spectators, that he was by most people called the second Sampson.[2] But tho' the postures which he had learned to put his body into, and found out by practice without any mechanical theory, were such as would make a man of common strength do such feats as would appear surprising to everybody that did not know the advantages of those positions of the body; yet nobody then attempted to draw against horses, or raise great
  1. Or William Joy.
  2. This is the spelling used by Joyce, Eckeberg and others, for the Samson of the Bible.