Themaslerseizedhis
formerpupil,lifted
him
high
abovehis
head,
Imdflung
him
crashing
mthe
ground.
The
sultanandtheInsem-
bly
letoutaloudcheer.
Whentherultunasked
themasierhowhr:was
able
toovercomerack
11
strongopponent,
fhe
rnmter
corifcxsed
that
he
hadreserved
asecret
techniqueforhimseif
for
jllsl
such 11 crmlirtr
gem-y.
Thenhe
related
theIamemulion
of
a
marlcr
ofarchery,
who
laugh:everything
he
knew."Noonehas
Ierzrnm!
archeryfrom
me,
"
the
poorfellow
cornphiined,
“whohas
rintmen‘tousemeas:2
buffintheend.
"
A
srour
orS/mm.
AS
TOLD1N
ms
CRAI-“IorPOW!-;R.
R.G.
H.511:,
1979
248
.
LAW 30
went
by;
themore
time
passed,
themorecertainit
seemed
thattheseman»
acleswouldbe
the
firsttodefeathim.Atone
point
he
emerged
fromthe
cabinet,
andaskedthatthecuffsbe
temporarily
removedsothathecould
takeoffhiscoat—itwashotinside.The
challengers
refused,
suspecting
his
request
wasatricktofindouthowthelocksworked.
Undeterred,
andwith
out
using
his
hands,
Houdini
managed
toliftthecoatoverhis
shoulders,
turn
it
inside
out,
remove
a
penknife
from
his
vest
with
his
teeth,
and,
bymoving
his
head,
outthecoatoffhisarms.Freedfromthe
coat,
he
stepped
backintothe
cabinet,
theaudience
roaring
with
approval
athis
grace
and
dexterity.
Finally, having kept
the
audience
wailing long enough,
Houdini
emerged
fromthecabinet
a
second
time,
now
withhishands
free,
the
man-
aclesraised
high
in
triumph.
Tothis
day
nooneknowshowhe
managed
the
escape.
Although
hehadtakenclosetoanhourtofree
himself,
hehad
neverlooked
concerned,
hadshownno
sign
ofdoubt.Indeeditseemed
by
theendthathehaddrawnoutthe
escape
asa
way
to
heighten
the
drama,
tomake
theaudience
worry-—-for
therewasnoother
sign
that
the
perfon
mance hadbeen
anything
but
easy.
The
complaint
about
theheatwas
equallypart
oftheact.The
spectators
ofthisandotherHoudini
perfon
mancesmusthavefelthewas
toying
withthem:Thesemanaclesarenoth~
ing,
heseemedto
say,
Icouldhavefreed
myself
alot
sooner,
andfroma
lot
worse.
Overthe
years,
Houdini
escaped
fromthechainedcarcassofanem
balmed “seamonster”
(3.
half
octopus,
halfwhalelike beast thathad
beachednear
Boston);
hehadhimselfsealedinsideanenormous
envelope
fromwhichhe
emerged
without
breaking
the
paper;
he
passedthrough
brick
walls;
he
wriggled
freefrom
straitjackets
while
danglinghigh
inthe
air;
he
leaped
from
bridges
into
icy
waters,
hishandsmanacled
andhis
legs
in
chains;
hehadhimself
submerged
in
glass
casesfullof
water,
hands
pad-
locked,
whiletheaudiencewatchedinamazementasheworkedhimself
free,
struggling
forclosetoanhour
apparently
without
breathing.
Each
timehe seemedtocourtcertain death
yet
survivedwith
superhuman
aplomb.
Meanwhile,
hesaid
nothing
abouthis
methods,
gave
nocluesas
tohowbe
accomplishedany
ofhistricks——~he
left
hisaudiencesandcritics
speculating,
his
power
and
reputation
enhanced
by
their
struggles
withthe
inexplicable.Perhaps
themost
baffling
trickofallwas
making
aten—thou-
sa.ud—poundelephantdisappear
beforeanaudience’s
eyes,
afeathere
peated
on
stage
forover
nineteenweeks.
Noone
hasever
reallyexplained
howhedid
this,
forintheauditoriumwherehe
performed
the
trick,
there
was
simply
nowhereforan
elephant
tohide.
TheeffortlessnessofHoudin1"s
escapes
ledsometothinkheusedoc-
cult
forces,
his
superiorpsychic
abilities
giving
him
special
controloverhis
body.
ButaGerman
escape
artistnamed
Kleppini
claimedtoknowHon»
dini’ssecret:He
simply
used
elaborate
gadgets.Kleppini
alsoclaimedto
havedefeatedHoudiniinahandcuff
challenge
inHolland.
Houdinididnotmindallkindsof
speculation
floating
aroundabout