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B

kMikb, from playiug ^ »»y sort of game for money: knight*

J ck-nrvuieii might play for money, but no one of them was

"nuVted to lose more than twenty shillings in one whole day

X,U nitiht, under the penalty of one hundred shillings, to be

I to the archbishops in the army; the two monarchs bad

IkTprivilege of playing for what they pleased; but their at

, mts wt.re restricted to the sum of twenty shillings; and, if

xceeded, they were to be whipped naked through the

anuv lor three days.1

\\X VII.—STATUTES AGAINST DICE, CARDS, BALL-PLAY, &c.

The decrees established by the council held at Worcester, in

. -wWity-fourth year of Henry III. prohibited the clergy

o playing at dice, or at chess:2 but neither the oqe nor the

. . oi' these games are mentioned in the succeeding penal

lutes, before the twelfth year of Richard II., when diceing

. particularised, and expressly forbidden; though perhaps

thev were both of them included under the general title of

o-Miues of chance, and dishonest games, mentioned in the pro

lamation of Edward III. which, with other pastimes therein

auecifit-'d, were generally practised to the great detriment of

military exercises, and of archery in particular.

In the eleventh year of Henry VII. cards are first mentioned among the games prohibited by the law;3 and at that time they seem to have been very generally used; for, the edict expressly forbids the practice of card-playing to apprentices, excepting ilir duration of the Christmas holidays, and then only in their masters' houses.1 We learn from Stow, that these holidays extended " from All-Hallows evening to the day after Candlemasday, when," says the historian, "there was, among other sports, playing at cards for counters, nailes, and points in every house, more for pastime than for gain."2 The recreations prohibited by proclamation in the reigu of Edward III., exclusive of the games of chance, are thus specified; throwing of stones,* wood, or iron; playing at hand-ball, foot-ball, club-ball, and cambucam, which I take to have been a species of goff, and probably received its name from the crooked bat with which it was played. These games, as before observed, were not forbidden from any particular evil tendency in themselves, but because they engrossed too much of the leisure and attention of the populace, and diverted their minds from the pursuits of a more martial nature. I should not forget to add, that " bullbaiting and cock-fighting" are included with " other dishonest games as trivial and useless." In 4 the reign of Edward IV. we find coits, closh or claish, kayles or nine-pins, half-bowl, handin and hand-out, with quick-borde, classed among the unlawful amusements;5 which list was considerably augmented in the succeeding reigns, and especially in the eighteenth year of Henry VIII., when bowling, loggating, playing at tennice, dice, cards and tables, or back-gammon, were included.6

i Benedict. Abbas, Vit. Ric. I. edit. a Hearne, torn. ii. p. 610.

i Die -v.ids in the original, as quoted by Du Cange, are these: "Nee ludant ad bli»» vel taxillos, nee sustineant ludos fieri de rege et regina," &c. The game of King and queen be conceives to have been some game with the cards; but most authors who have written upon the subject of playing cards, think that they were not known at that period, at least in thiscountry: it is certain, however, that in the time of Elizabeth, the game of king and queen was understood to mean the playing with cards. "John Heywood, the great epigrammatist," according to Camden, "used to say he did not love to play at kinge and queene, but at Christmasse, according to the old order of Englaude; that few men plaiyed at cardes but at Christmasse; and then almost all, men and boyes." Camden's Remains, p. 378. I have ventured to substitute chess for cards, in which game the two principal pieces are the king and the queeL, and are so denominated in a MS. nearly coeval with the edict. See the nccount of this game in the body of the work.

'An. 11 lien. VII. cap. 2.

In the preamble to the Parliamentary Statutes as early as the sixth year of Edward III., there is a clause prohibiting of boys or others from playing at barres, or snatch-hood,7 or any other improper games, in the king's palace at Westminster during the sitting of the parliament; neither might they, by striking, or otherwise, prevent any one from passing peaceably about his business.

1 No householder might permit the games prohibited by the statute to be practised in their houses, excepting on the holidays, as before specified, under the penalty of six shillings and eight-pence for every offence.

* Survey of London, p. 79.

3 Pilam manualem, pedinam, et bacculoream, et ad cambucam, &c.

• Rot. Claus. 39 Ed. III. m. 23.

1 The magistrates are commanded to seize upon the said tables, dice, cards, boules, closhes, tennice-balls, &c. and to burn them.

6 An. 17 Edw. II. cap. 3.

7 Nul enfaunt ne autres jeur a barres, ne a autres jues nient convenebles come a o istre chaperon des gentz, ne a mettre en eux,&c. Rot. Pari. an. 6 Edw.III. Marl. MS. 7iW8.

XXXVIII.—PROHIBITIONS OF SKITTLE-PLAY.

In modern times, the penal laws have been multiplied, and much invigorated, in order to restrain the spirit of gambling; and in some measure they have had a salutary effect; but the evil is so fascinating and so general, that in all probability it will never be totally eradicated from the minds of the people. The frequent repetition and enforcement of the statutes in former times, proves that they were then, as they are now, inadequate to the suppression of gaming for a long continuance; and, when one pastime was prohibited, another was presently invented to supply its place. I remember, about twenty years back,1 the magistrates caused all the skittle-frames in or about the city of London to be taken up, and prohibited the playing at dutch-pins, nine-pius, or in long bowling allies, when in many places the game of nine-holes was revived as a substitute, with the new name of Bubble the Justice, because the populace had taken it into their heads to imagine, that the power of the magistrates extended only to the prevention of such pastimes as were specified by name in the public acts, and not to any new species of diversiou.

XXXIX.—ARCHERY SUCCEEDED BY BOWLING.

The general decay of those manly and spirited exercises, which formerly were practised in the vicinity of the metropolis has not arisen from any want of inclination in the people, but from the want of places proper for the purpose: such as in times past had been allotted to them are now covered with buildings, or shut up by enclosures, so that, if it were not for skittles, dutch-pins, four-corners, and the like pastimes, they would have no amusements for the exercise of the body; and these amusements are only to be met with in places belonging to common drinking-houses, for which reason their play is seldom productive of much benefit, but more frequently becomes the prelude to drunkenness and debauchery. This evil has been increasing for a long series of years; and honest Stow laments the retrenchments of the grounds appropriated for martial pastimes which bad begun to take place in his day. "Why," says he, "should 1 speak of the ancient exercises of the long bow, by the citizens of this city, now almost clean left off and forsaken? I over-pass it; for, by the means of closeing in of common grounds, our archers, for want of room to shoot abroad, creep into bowling-alleys and ordinarie diceing1 iouses neer home, where they have room enough to hazard their money at unlawful games."1 He also tells us, that " Northumberland house, in the parish of St. Katherine Coleman, belonging to Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland, in the thirty-third year of Henry the Sixth; but of late, being deserted by that noble family, the gardens were converted into bowling-alleys, and the other parts of the eslate into diceing houses. But bowling-alleys and houses for the exercise of diceing and other unlawful games are at this time so greatly increased in the other parts of the city and its suburbs, that this parent spot," or, as he afterwards calls it, "the ancient and only patron of misrule, is forsaken of its gamesters."2 And here we may add the following remark from an author somewhat more ancient than Stow:3 "common bowling-alleyes are privy mothes that eat up the credit of many idle citizens, whose gaynes at home are not able to weigh downe theyr losses abroad; whose shoppes are so farre from maintaining their play, that theyr wives and children cry out for bread, and go to bedde supperlesse ofte in the yeere." In another place, his reflections are more general, and he exclaims, "Oh, what a wonderful change is this! our wreastling at armes is turned to wallowing in ladies' laps, out courage to cowardice, our running to royot, our bowes into bowls, and our darts into dishes."

1 [Before 1801.]

XL.—MODERN GAMBLING.

The evils complained of by these writers were then in their infancy; they have in the present day attained to a gigantic stature; and we may add to them E.O. tables, as also other tables for gambling distinguished by the appellation of Rouge et Noir, Pharo-banks, and many more fashionable novelties, equally as detrimental to morality, and as equally destructive to the fortunes of those who pursue them, as any of the recreations of the former times. Even horse-racing, which anciently was considered as a liberal sport, and proper for the amusement of a gentleman, has been of late years degraded into a dangerous species of gambling, by no means the less deserving of censure, because it is fashionable and countenanced by persons of the higuest rank and fortune. The good old Scotch poet little dreamed of such an innovation, when he lamented that horse-racing was falling into disrepute through the prevalency of games of chance. His words are these:

1 Survey of London, p. 85.

* It was afterwards converted into small cottages, which were let, at large rents, to strangers and others. Ibid. p. 138.

3 Stephen Gosson, in The School of Abuse, 1579.

Halking, hunting, and swift horse running
Are changit all in wrangus, wynning;
There is no play but cartes and dyce, Sec.1

XLI.—LADIES' PASTIMES—NEEDLE-WORK.

It now remains to say a few words in a general way respecting the diversions of the English ladies. In the early ages, our fair countrywomen employed a large portion of their time in needlework and embroidery; and their acquirements in these elegant accomplishments most probably afforded them little leisure for the pursuits of trifling and useless amusements; but, though we are not acquainted with the nature of their recreations, there is no reason to suppose that they were unbecoming in themselves, or indulged beyond the bounds of reason or decorum. I have already, on a former occasion, particularly noticed the skilfulness of the Saxon and Norman ladies in handling the needle, embroidering, and working in tapestry; and that their performances were not only held in very high estimation at home, but were equally prized upon the continent, where none were produced that could be placed in competition with them.2

1 That is, cards and dice; an old anonymous poem " of Covetice," cited hy Warton, History of Poetry, vol. ii. p. 316.

'In the Manners and Customs of the English; the Chronicle of England; and more particularly in the View of the Dresses of the English; vol. i, p. 73, vol. ii. p. 140, &c.

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