Join Historical Fiction author, Deborah Swift, as she takes a loon at Lanterloo and Hoodman Blind – 17th Century Christmas Games #Christmas #History @swiftstory


Children might play a game of cratch cradle which we know today as cat’s cradle. Originally the ‘cratch cradle’ represented the manger, or cratch, where Christ was born. "From his cratch to his cross," was a well-known 17th Century phrase meaning from cradle to grave. In the pattern of the string, you can see how this cross-bracing effect looks like a manger.

For those looking for a drinking game, how about hijinks ? Players had to roll a dice, and the lowest scoring player would have to take a drink or pay a forfeit. From this we get familiar phrase denoting someone in a high-spirited prank. Another game played in the tavern was John Bull or bullstones , where players would take it in turns tossing coins or stones onto a numbered grid of squares, in an effort to score more points than their neighbour. This was also played by children who would scratch the grid into the dirt to play on the street.A more dangerous game was mumblety-peg which involved throwing a knife at a peg in the ground. The closest to the peg was the winner, but the loser had to extract the peg from the ground with his teeth (English slang - a peg = a tooth). Ouch!Other active games included hoodman-blind , (blind-man’s-buff) and stool-ball which it is believed evolved into cricket. In stool-ball, you had to throw a hard leather ball stuffed with straw or grain at a milking stool. Another person defended it with a wooden bat. The milking stool traditionally had three legs, so you can see how perhaps the cricket ‘stumps’ evolved.


On New Year’s Day though, you could become king and queen for the night. Straws or lots were drawn for the king and queen by the finding of a pea or bean baked in the Twelfth Night cake. The cake was cut so one of the men got the bean and one of the women the pea, and these two could rule over the revels until midnight, when Christmas was officially over.Happy holidays readers – what games do you enjoy playing over the holiday period? As a family we love to play Quirkle and Ingenious as well as the more traditional Monopoly. And of course snuggling down with a good book is always a possibility!
Entertaining Mr Pepys
By Deborah Swift

London 1666Elizabeth 'Bird' Carpenter has a wonderful singing voice, and music is her chief passion. When her father persuades her to marry horse-dealer Christopher Knepp, she suspects she is marrying beneath her station, but nothing prepares her for the reality of life with Knepp. Her father has betrayed her trust, for Knepp cares only for his horses; he is a tyrant and a bully, and will allow Bird no life of her own.When Knepp goes away, she grasps her chance and, encouraged by her maidservant Livvy, makes a secret visit to the theatre. Entranced by the music, the glitter and glamour of the surroundings, and the free and outspoken manner of the women on the stage, she falls in love with the theatre and is determined to forge a path of her own as an actress.But life in the theatre was never going to be straightforward - for a jealous rival wants to spoil her plans, and worse, Knepp forbids it, and Bird must use all her wit and intelligence to change his mind.Based on events depicted in the famous Diary of Samuel Pepys, Entertaining Mr Pepys brings London in the 17th Century to life. It includes the vibrant characters of the day such as the diarist himself and actress Nell Gwynne, and features a dazzling and gripping finale during the Great Fire of London.The third in Deborah Swift's atmospheric trilogy, bringing to life the women in Pepys' Diary. Each novel features a different character and can be read as a stand-alone book.
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Entertaining Mr Pepys
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Deborah Swift

She lives on the edge of the beautiful and literary English Lake District – a place made famous by the poets Wordsworth and Coleridge.
Connect with Deborah: Website • Facebook • Twitter • Goodreads.
Published on December 09, 2019 20:00
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The Coffee Pot Book Club
The Coffee Pot Book Club (formally Myths, Legends, Books, and Coffee Pots) was founded in 2015. Our goal was to create a platform that would help Historical Fiction, Historical Romance and Historical
The Coffee Pot Book Club (formally Myths, Legends, Books, and Coffee Pots) was founded in 2015. Our goal was to create a platform that would help Historical Fiction, Historical Romance and Historical Fantasy authors promote their books and find that sometimes elusive audience. The Coffee Pot Book Club soon became the place for readers to meet new authors (both traditionally published and independently) and discover their fabulous books.
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