1637.1: Difference between revisions
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|Text=<p>Burton, Henry, and William Prynne, <u>A Divine Tragedie Lately Acted</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 171. In a denunciation of King Charles' approval of after-church play on Sundays, the authors cite as one of the "memorable examples of Gods judgements" a case in which youths "playing at Catt on the Lords day, two of them fell out, and the one hitting the other under the eare with his catt, he therwith fell downe for dead." Cited by David Block in <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 171: Block notes that the weapon here was a cat-stick.</p> | |Text=<p>Burton, Henry, and William Prynne, <u>A Divine Tragedie Lately Acted</u> [London], per David Block, <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 171. In a denunciation of King Charles' approval of after-church play on Sundays, the authors cite as one of the "memorable examples of Gods judgements" a case in which youths "playing at Catt on the Lords day, two of them fell out, and the one hitting the other under the eare with his catt, he therwith fell downe for dead." Cited by David Block in <u>Baseball Before We Knew It</u>, page 171: Block notes that the weapon here was a cat-stick.</p> | ||
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Conservative Protestants Decry Sunday Play, See Grave Danger in it
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Text | Burton, Henry, and William Prynne, A Divine Tragedie Lately Acted [London], per David Block, Baseball Before We Knew It, page 171. In a denunciation of King Charles' approval of after-church play on Sundays, the authors cite as one of the "memorable examples of Gods judgements" a case in which youths "playing at Catt on the Lords day, two of them fell out, and the one hitting the other under the eare with his catt, he therwith fell downe for dead." Cited by David Block in Baseball Before We Knew It, page 171: Block notes that the weapon here was a cat-stick. |
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1637.1 Conservative Protestants Decry Sunday Play, See Grave Danger in it"
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