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After a second tour of the leading cities of Europe, where it was received
with unabated enthusiasm, in 1819 the Automaton was again established in London, under M. Maelzel. For some years it was exhibited in Canada and the
United States, and was finally understood to have returned to New York, where
it was shown in the autumn of 1845.
Meanwhile there were various attempts made to discover the secret. The ingenious
inventor never pretended that the Automaton itself really played the game; on the
contrary, he distinctly stated that "the machine was a bagatelle, which
was not without merit in point of mechanism, but that the effects of it appeared
so marvelous only from the boldness of the conception, and the fortunate choice
of the methods adopted for promoting the illusion." It was surmised that the game
was played either by a person inclosed in the chest, or by the exhibitor himself;
yet the chest, being nearly filled with machinery, did not appear capable of
accommodating even a dwarf; nor could any mechanical communication between the
exhibitor and the figure be detected. It was then thought to be influenced by a
magnet, which the exhibitor disproved by placing a strong and well-armed loadstone
upon the machine during the game, which did not affect the moving power. The original
conjecture, that the player was concealed in the interior, was then revived; and in
1789, Mr. J.F. Freyhere, of Dresden, published a pamphlet, in which he endeavored
to explain by colored plates how the effect was produced; and he concluded "that
a well-taught boy, very thin and tall of his age (sufficiently so that he could be
concealed in a drawer almost immediately under the chess-board), agitated the
whole."
In an earlier pamphlet, published in Paris in 1785, the writer supposed the machine
was put in motion by a dwarf, a famous chess-player, his legs and thighs being
concealed in two hollow cylinders, while the rest of his body was out of the box,
and hidden by the robes of the figure.
Sir David Brewster, in his Natural Magic, describes the secret as shown in
a pamphlet published anonymously, and the machine to be capable of accommodating an
ordinarily-sized man; and he explains, in the clearest manner, how "the inclosed
player takes all the different positions, and performs all the motions which are
necessary to produce the effects actually observed." Sir David devotes eight pages
of his work, with illustrative wood-cuts, to this explanation, and endeavors to show
how the real player may be concealed in the chest, and partly in the figure: "as
his head is above the chess-board, he will see through the waistcoat of the figure,
as easily as through a veil, the whole of the pieces on the board; and he can easily
take up and put down a chess-man without any other mechanism than that of a string
communicating with the finger of the left hand of the figure," the right hand being
within the chest, to keep in motion the wheel-work for producing the noise heard
during the moves, and to move the head, tap the chest, etc.
Mr. Staunton also maintains that the chess-player who directed the Automaton was
really hidden in the interior; that the machinery so ostentatiously exhibited was
a sham, yet so contrived that it would collapse or expand, to suit the exigencies
of the hidden agent's various positions; while the chest was exhibited, he was in
the figure, and when the figure, he was in the chest. While conducting a game, he
sat at the bottom of the chest, with a small pegged chess-board and men on his
lap, and a lighted taper affixed, within reach were a handle by which he could
guide the arm of the Automaton, an elastic spring for moving its fingers, and cord
in communication with bellows for producing the sound of "Check." The most ingenious
part of the contrivance remains to be told. M. Mouret, the celebrated chess-player,
who directed the movements of the Automaton for some years, states that the concealed
player was seated immediately under the chess-board of the Automaton, and from the
under side, at every one of the sixty-four squares, was suspended by the finest silk
a tiny metallic ball; and as each of the chess-men had a magnet inside, when it was
placed upon a square, it drew up the ball beneath, while the balls beneath the other
squares remained suspended. The pieces being arranged, the Automaton opened the game;
and turning the handle of the arm of the figure, and putting in motion the finger-springs,
he caused it to take up the piece to be played, which was indicated by the falling
ball, and when it was placed upon a square, the ball was drawn up. He then repeated the
move on the small board in his lap, and thus the game proceeded.
To be continued...
About the Author
This is from the book, "STORIES
OF INVENTORS AND DISCOVERERS", by John Timbs (1860), which
is in the public domain.
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