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The Art of Continued nro but tin- needless aecoinpanlineiilH of the essential privilege of the eir j ens to present to us a succession j of acrobats with their bodies In per fect condition, to exhibit to us that purely physical beauty which we nre over In danger or overlooking or even forgetting. These acrobats, slim and handsome, as 1 1 tick Finn found them, may display their daring and their grace, standing on a cir cling steed or swinging from a Hying trapeze, revolving on a horizontal bar or building themselves up Into human pyramids on the bark of the arena; but the way In which they may , choose to exhibit their skill and to 1 show themselves Is unimportant, i While the Greeks had far more op , portunltles than are vouchsafed to us moderns to behold the human body exhibiting Its strength and Its skill in graceful play, wo have the advan tage that many of tho most effective exercises are latterday Inventions. It seems unlikely that the Athenians and tho Spartans, even though they were horsemen, had attained to tho art of bareback riding; they may have bestraddled a saddleless steed, but they had not learned how to stand on his back and to turn sum mersets In tlmo with tho stride of the horse. It Is, of course, possible that they were familiar with this, but no sculpture and no vase-painting, no anecdote In tho works of tho prose-writers and no lino of the lyr ists, survives to authorize us to be lieve it. And It Is pretty certain also that they lacked the horizontal bar, which affords limitless possi bilities to tho adventurous acrobat of our own times. Tho trapeze has a name of Greek origin and It was possibly known to tho Greeks. Dut tho Greeks did not foresee the full possibilities of tho trapeze, since Its most startling utili zation, tho feat known as tho Flying Trapeze, was Invented by the French acrobat Leotard, only a Httlo later than tho middle of tho nineteenth century. Tho Flying Trapeze Is tho ultimate achievement of acrobatic art, and It demands the utmost com bination of skilful strength and of easy grace. It was a feat that the Greeks would havo appreciated and enjoyed; since It demanded and dis closed the perfection of physical courago and of physical skill. "HACKFUL mastery of tho trapezo was tho most marked characteris tic of Leotard; and it may bo doubted , whethor any of those who havo fol I lowed tho path ho traced through tho j air and who havo vanquished dllhcul- tles uoyonu thoso wulcn no con quered, havo been able to outdo him In tho essential of grace Tho over coming ot difficulty Is one of tho ele ments of tho pleasure which wo take 1 In any art; part of our enjoyment ot a sonnet, for example, must bo ascribed to tho apparent case with which tho poet Is able to express his thought amply and completely within tho rigid limitations of his fourteen lines with their prescribed arrange ment of live or six rhymes. Hut our delight is diminished If we are made conscious of tho effort It has cost tho artist to attain his aim. Many of the later performers on the Flying Trapeze let us seo that the feats they nro attempting are so diffi cult that they can not bo accom plished without obvious effort. It hnppens that tho present writer Is able to bring his personal testi mony to tho fact that this was tho principle which always governed Leotard himself. When tho French gymnast paid his only visit to tho I'nltcd States, more than forty years I ago, he used to practice lu a gym 1 nnslum which tho writer also fro i quented. lie spoko no English and I tho writer had a Httlo school-boy I Fronch, so that a certain intimacy sprang up. Ono day Leotard asked the writer to swing a trapezo for The Acrobat fiom Pane him and he sprang off and caught It with a single hnntl, and as tho hoc ond trapezo returned he twisted and grasped the llrst trapezo again with one hand. This evoked an Immediate- exclamation of astonishment and admiration at tho startling conquest of difficulty, and It was followed by I ho natural question why so extraor dinary a feat had never been ex hibited in public. "Don't you see the reason?" he asked. "Watch me, while I do It again." He repeated the feat; and when it was over ho smiled and asked, "Do you seo now?" The writer responded that he could not help observing a certain awk wardness In Leotard's movements, a certain violence of effort, and u cer tain lack of grace. "That's just' It," Leotard replied. "The leaps from trapeze to trapezo with the aid of ono hand only must be lopsided, since tho body is Inev itably moro or less twisted. There Is a sort of wrenching of the person which can not be avoided, even if it is ungraceful. That is why I have never exhibited this feat in public, difficult ns It Is. That Is why I never shall exhibit it, for the quality I seek above all things Is grace; which Is possible only when I can use both hands, so that I can make what I do seem easy, no matter how difficult it may be." It was lu the same winter that LOotard was in New York about forty years ago that the Ilnnlon Brothers paid ono of their welcome visits to America. They were then acrobats pure and simple, although later when they called themselves the Hanlon-Lees they had becomo pantomlmlsts. As acrobats they held fast to tho same principles which governed LOotard in his perform ances. They Insisted upon certainty of execution; they never failed to perform the feat thoy set out to ac complish, and to perform It success fully, tho first tlmo they tried It. Tho present writer was told at tho tlmo that there were two or three surprising nnd alluring feats which tho Hanlons had Invented themselves and which thoy practiced laboriously and faithfully all that winter, but which they wisely refrained from ever putting on their program be cause they were never nblo to assure themselves of a uniformly successful result. They could do any ono of these feats four times out of live, but tho fifth tlmo thero would bo a mis calculation of energy, nnd tho at tempt would have to bo repeated. LI ERE again tho modern acrobat, who Is guided by a real feeling for his art, is in accord with tho principles which tho Greeks obeyed. In Attic trngody, for example, there nro no scenes of violence, no scullles nnd no assassinations; nnd this Is not because tho Greeks shrank from scenes of blood, ns some critics have vainly contended, but rather because tho actors In their drama were raised on thick boots and were topped by toweling masks, which made It al most Impossible for thorn to take part in scenes of violence. In hand to-hand struggles, in murders before the eyes of tho spectators, without danger of displacing tho mask and thereby distracting tho attention of tho audience from tho Immediate pur poso of the dramatic poet. What could not bo done gracefully the Greeks refrained from attempting Tho exhibition of difficulty for the sako of difficulty, still moro tho fall uro to accomplish a "stunt" for the sako of calling attention to its dlffl culty these things the Greeks ab horred. 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