1828.13: Difference between revisions

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|Headline=In Christian Story, a Young Girl Chooses Batting Over Tatting
|Headline=In Christian Story, a Young Girl Chooses Batting Over Tatting
|Year=1828
|Year=1828
|Is in main chronology=yes
|Salience=2
|Text=<p>A very strict school mistress scolds the title character:  "You can't say three times three without missing; you'd rather play at bass-ball, or hunt the hedges for wild flowers, than mend your stockings." </p>
|Text=<p>A very strict school mistress scolds the title character:  "You can't say three times three without missing; you'd rather play at bass-ball, or hunt the hedges for wild flowers, than mend your stockings." </p>
<p>A.M.H. [only initials are given], "The Gipsey Girl," in <u>The Amulet, Or Christian and Literary Remembrancer</u> (W. Baynes and Son, London, 1828), pp 91-104.  This short moral tale is set in England, and the girl is described as being eight or nine years old.  Accessed 2/4/10 via Google Books search ("amulet or christian" 1828).</p>
<p>A.M.H. [only initials are given], "The Gipsey Girl," in <u>The Amulet, Or Christian and Literary Remembrancer</u> (W. Baynes and Son, London, 1828), pp 91-104.  This short moral tale is set in England, and the girl is described as being eight or nine years old.  Accessed 2/4/10 via Google Books search ("amulet or christian" 1828).</p>
<p>Reported by Tom Altherr, "Some Findings on Bass Ball," <u>Originals</u>, February 2010. This story was reprinted as "The Gipsy Girl," in <u>The Cabinet Annual: A Christmas and New Year's Gift for 1855</u> (E. H. Butler, Philadelphia, 1855) page 93ff: Provided by David Block, email of 2/27/2008. </p>
<p>Reported by Tom Altherr, "Some Findings on Bass Ball," <u>Originals</u>, February 2010. This story was reprinted as "The Gipsy Girl," in <u>The Cabinet Annual: A Christmas and New Year's Gift for 1855</u> (E. H. Butler, Philadelphia, 1855) page 93ff: Provided by David Block, email of 2/27/2008. </p>
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In Christian Story, a Young Girl Chooses Batting Over Tatting

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A very strict school mistress scolds the title character: "You can't say three times three without missing; you'd rather play at bass-ball, or hunt the hedges for wild flowers, than mend your stockings."

A.M.H. [only initials are given], "The Gipsey Girl," in The Amulet, Or Christian and Literary Remembrancer (W. Baynes and Son, London, 1828), pp 91-104. This short moral tale is set in England, and the girl is described as being eight or nine years old. Accessed 2/4/10 via Google Books search ("amulet or christian" 1828).

Reported by Tom Altherr, "Some Findings on Bass Ball," Originals, February 2010. This story was reprinted as "The Gipsy Girl," in The Cabinet Annual: A Christmas and New Year's Gift for 1855 (E. H. Butler, Philadelphia, 1855) page 93ff: Provided by David Block, email of 2/27/2008.

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