Help us get to over 8,749 articles in 2024.
If you know of a magician not listed in MagicPedia, start a New Biography for them. Contact us at magicpediahelp@gmail.com
Difference between revisions of "Breslaw's Last Legacy"
m (→Editions) |
m |
||
(5 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | [[Breslaw's Last Legacy]]; Or the Magical Companion: Containing All that is Curious, Pleasing, Entertaining, and Comical; ... Including the Various Exhibitions of Those Wonderful Artists: Breslaw, Sieur Comus, Jonas, &c. ... With an Accurate Description of the Method how to Make the Air Balloon ... was a book inspired by Philip Breslaw and published in 1784. | + | [[Breslaw's Last Legacy]]; ''Or the Magical Companion: Containing All that is Curious, Pleasing, Entertaining, and Comical; ... Including the Various Exhibitions of Those Wonderful Artists: Breslaw, Sieur Comus, Jonas, &c. ... With an Accurate Description of the Method how to Make the Air Balloon ...'' was a book inspired by Philip Breslaw and published in 1784. |
{{Infobox book | {{Infobox book | ||
| author = Philip Breslaw | | author = Philip Breslaw | ||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
| editor = | | editor = | ||
| illustrator = | | illustrator = | ||
− | | language = | + | | language = English |
| pages = | | pages = | ||
| isbn = | | isbn = | ||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
"Breslaw may have compiled the eighteenth-century editions ... It is clear, however, that he was not responsible for the many small pamphlets of the same title published in the early nineteenth century." -- [[Trevor Hall]] in [[Old Conjuring Books]]. | "Breslaw may have compiled the eighteenth-century editions ... It is clear, however, that he was not responsible for the many small pamphlets of the same title published in the early nineteenth century." -- [[Trevor Hall]] in [[Old Conjuring Books]]. | ||
+ | |||
== Editions == | == Editions == | ||
Line 33: | Line 34: | ||
* The twelfth edition, with great additions and improvements printed for J. Barker; and sold by B. Crosby (1794) | * The twelfth edition, with great additions and improvements printed for J. Barker; and sold by B. Crosby (1794) | ||
* American Edition in Philadelphia (1811) (Making it the fourth American book devoted to magic) | * American Edition in Philadelphia (1811) (Making it the fourth American book devoted to magic) | ||
− | * A facsimile of the 1795 edition with new | + | * A facsimile of the 1795 edition with new foreword by Byron Walker (1997) |
+ | |||
+ | Raymond Ricard has posted pictures of an American Edition that he found which was printed in Philadelphia in 1796. This would make it the second book on conjuring published in the United States (after Dean's Whole Art of Legerdemain).<ref>http://thayermagic.ning.com/</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{References}} | ||
+ | |||
{{Books}} | {{Books}} |
Revision as of 13:19, 2 August 2014
Breslaw's Last Legacy; Or the Magical Companion: Containing All that is Curious, Pleasing, Entertaining, and Comical; ... Including the Various Exhibitions of Those Wonderful Artists: Breslaw, Sieur Comus, Jonas, &c. ... With an Accurate Description of the Method how to Make the Air Balloon ... was a book inspired by Philip Breslaw and published in 1784.
Breslaw's Last Legacy | |
Author | Philip Breslaw |
---|---|
Publication Date | 1784 |
Language | English |
Based on the number of editions published, Breslaw's Last Legacy ranks as one of the most popular antiquarian magic books published in English.
Items described include bringing a dead fly back to life, making your companions appear hideous, pulling off a person's shirt without undressing him and making a selected card jump out of the pack.
"Breslaw may have compiled the eighteenth-century editions ... It is clear, however, that he was not responsible for the many small pamphlets of the same title published in the early nineteenth century." -- Trevor Hall in Old Conjuring Books.
Editions
- First edition (1784)
- Second edition (1784)
- Fifth edition London, W. Lane (1791)
- Breslaw's Last Legacy: Or, the Conjuror Unmasked, with Great Additions and Improvements (1792)
- Sixth edition Dublin, J. Rice, (1793)
- The twelfth edition, with great additions and improvements printed for J. Barker; and sold by B. Crosby (1794)
- American Edition in Philadelphia (1811) (Making it the fourth American book devoted to magic)
- A facsimile of the 1795 edition with new foreword by Byron Walker (1997)
Raymond Ricard has posted pictures of an American Edition that he found which was printed in Philadelphia in 1796. This would make it the second book on conjuring published in the United States (after Dean's Whole Art of Legerdemain).[1]
References