A single strand, gold chain, say 24" long, joined.
Dr Marcos was arranging it into images, then forming a snake, then two loops by tossing one half over another. He made a handle at the juncture of the two circles, which resembles the figure 8 there on the table.
His wife was explaining about the whalers. When they came into port, Cape Cod or Salem or Boston, they’d often find on the dock Thimblerig, a frock-coat gamester playing his necklace over an upturned barrel. "Cash on the barrelhead," said Mrs Marcos, explaining the origin of the expression. The whalers came to lay their money down.
It was a very simple gamble. The whaleman indicated, mostly by jamming his harpoon into it, upon which circle he was betting, Thimblerig would pull his handle of chain and the cirlces would close into a line and the point of the harpoon would catch or it would not. And that was the wager: which circle was fast, and which a myth?

Anybody would induce you into a proposition on one account and one only; he could take you at it. Once in the old days the Dallas Cowboys were lining up against one of their Eastern Conference rivals, and the first play they went for the downs. Jogging back to the huddle was the World’s Fastest Human, Bob Hayes, who had not however opened up a gap against his man sufficient to allow a target. The announcer said about the defender simply; "Obviously they thought they could whip him, else they wouldn’t have tried it."
When I was reading Faulkner, there was a series about the Snopes family, and I very soon began to see them as the anti-Semitic legend of the swarming commiving cozening Jew in a vast extended network like a web set to ensnare holy Christians. Flem, as the connotative name was, Snopes moved right on up the scale, and married a beauty and went to work in the Jefferson bank. And Faulkner said, there is one reason and one only anyone would agree to hold your money, and that is to skim at least some of it. It helps to remember that.
I had some very good advice delivered to my door free in my life, and one choice selection came from Harold Speed, General Cable Corp, circa 1965. "Never play another man’s game." I have remembered that, too.
The problem is in the nature of abstraction. A primitive will search for his answer deep within the two circles, the concrete, the real. Throughout a long afternoon, nothing else is seen but the circles, until eventually none of what the haprpoonist has won through hard toil long at sea remains to him.
Dr Marcos lived with his family in a shaded Victorian beneath mighty oaks, and his rec room where he presented his magic act was in the basement. He was short, goateed, and mysterious, and he spoke in a very soft voice, and if the kids spoke out of turn while he was murmuring the Mrs would shush them. He was an actual doctor, or had been.
His audience might be his son and daughter and maybe her beautiful friend Jeana Delight and other kids. I was there a couple of times, but I was tangential.
But I went home one evening two little villages over, and I sat down with a length of chain, and I set about discovering just how the magic worked. I knew there was nothing mysterious about the chain, so the secret must be elsewhere.
It came to me in the night.
So in the morning I drove to where Jeana Delight was waitressing. She was maybe sixteen in those years, and when she walked by, everyone was aware of it. When she had a moment, I spread my chain on the table, and demonstrated the magic.
She picked a circle and it disappeared as the chain slid over the table. And then another, and the chain was caught by her finger. She looked up and she smiled so demurely at me.
She never asked, and I never told.




9 Comments







fun fun read, I hope there are more instalments
Oh, yes, thank you for this. More please.
Thanks! I have nigh on 66 years of ‘em!
Clovis
I like yer moniker.
So “they” exist still, after all?
Good on ya! ;->
They’re out there, all right.
The trick in its effect wasn’t really explained. Briefly, you could nail a circle with your harpoon, and it would either snag the chain or the chain would slither away around it. The more primitive gamblers kept guessing the night through. The more savvy were able to determine that the forming of the two circles was significant; it mattered which was created by tossing one end of the chain over the other. And so surreptitiously they would bet that way, confirmed in their judgment when it was noted Thimbelrig would switch from top to bottom ends in making his figure 8.
The Big Bam Boom was the final wager, with all in, and betting on the circle which had been the live one throughout the night. But it slipped away! The sure bet was lost!
And then two bettors stabbed each circle. Now let’s see your pretty necklace escape!
And it did! Both circles were fancy!
How can it be? Our learned environment proves to be a delusion!
It happens just like that.
three card monty, same game differant tools
two red aces, one black, the “mechanic” can make you absolutely certain where the black one is, but it’s not
he then has you think you’ve got him tricked by deliberately bending a corner on the black ace, however he can unbend that corner and rebend another ace and you’ve lost again
and they have a shill, someone who actually wins the bet once in a while, he works with the mechanic
and finally he has the can’t loose tool if the person gets the right card by simply guessing;
he will take your twenty dollar bill and put it on top of his stack of bank, give you 40 dollars from the botton, the bottom is all counterfeit, he as still made 20 bucks
or the pea in the shell game, the pee is nowhere, to be placed by the mechanic after you’ve picked an empty shell
I have given demonstration on three card monty when I was younger
Best advice from the whole episode: never bet on another guy’s game.
Interesting that when the results vary, hardly anyone ever looks for variables. First, the chain. Anyone can inspect it, before or after the trick. It’s solid, without any component not plainly visible. And yet the circles created by it very definitely and manifestly do vary.
Reminds me of the old guy working at a factory that made something out on that black prairie land. A compressor coughed, wheezed, blew steam, shut down. He approached that hissing pile of scrap, said, “Now, sumpin’s wrong sommmmeeee where …”
It was at least a start. The whalers, they just plunk down them harpoons and wait for what happenes next.
((smooch))
There’s a sucker born every minute and…
Everything You Know is Wrong.
More, please, Clovis.