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|Headline=Bawdy Poem Has Wenches Playing "With Stoole and Ball" | |Headline=Bawdy Poem Has Wenches Playing "With Stoole and Ball" | ||
|Year=1619 | |Year=1619 | ||
| | |Salience=2 | ||
|Game=Stoolball | |Game=Stoolball | ||
|Tags=Females | |Tags=Females | ||
|Text=<p>"It was the day of all dayes in the yeare/That unto Bacchus hath its dedication,/ . . . / When country wenches play with stoole and ball,/And run at <i>Barley-breake</i> until they fall:/And country lads fall on them, in such sort/That after forty weekes the[sic] rew the sport."</p> | |Text=<p>"It was the day of all dayes in the yeare/That unto Bacchus hath its dedication,/ . . . / When country wenches play with stoole and ball,/And run at <i>Barley-breake</i> until they fall:/And country lads fall on them, in such sort/That after forty weekes the[sic] rew the sport."</p> | ||
<p>Anonymous, <u>Pasquils Palinodia, and His Progress to the Taverne; Where, After the Survey of the Sellar, You Are Presented with a Pleasant Pynte of Poeticall Sherry</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 169, who credits Henderson, page 74. Block notes that "Barley-Break" [not a ball game] was, like stoole ball, traditionally a spring courtship ritual in the English countryside.</p> | <p>Anonymous, <u>Pasquils Palinodia, and His Progress to the Taverne; Where, After the Survey of the Sellar, You Are Presented with a Pleasant Pynte of Poeticall Sherry</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 169, who credits Henderson, page 74. Block notes that "Barley-Break" [not a ball game] was, like stoole ball, traditionally a spring courtship ritual in the English countryside.</p> | ||
|Reviewed=Yes | |||
|Year Number=1 | |||
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Bawdy Poem Has Wenches Playing "With Stoole and Ball"
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Text | "It was the day of all dayes in the yeare/That unto Bacchus hath its dedication,/ . . . / When country wenches play with stoole and ball,/And run at Barley-breake until they fall:/And country lads fall on them, in such sort/That after forty weekes the[sic] rew the sport." Anonymous, Pasquils Palinodia, and His Progress to the Taverne; Where, After the Survey of the Sellar, You Are Presented with a Pleasant Pynte of Poeticall Sherry [London], per David Block, Baseball Before We Knew It, page 169, who credits Henderson, page 74. Block notes that "Barley-Break" [not a ball game] was, like stoole ball, traditionally a spring courtship ritual in the English countryside. |
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