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Put (card game)

Put, occasionally Putt, is an English tavern game first recorded in the 16th century[1] and later castigated by 17th century moralists as one of ill repute.[2] It belongs to a very ancient family of trick-taking card games and bears close similarities a group known as Truc, Trut, Truque, also Tru, and the South American game Truco. Its more elaborate cousin is the Catelan and Spanish game of Truc, which is still much played in many parts of Southern France and Spain.

Put
The tavern game of "ill repute"
The highest ranking cards are the Threes
OriginEngland
Alternative namesPutt
TypeVying game
FamilyTrick-taking
Players2-4
SkillsTactics & Strategy
Cards52
DeckEnglish
Rank (high→low)3 2 A K Q J T 9 8 7 6 5 4
PlayClockwise
Playing time15 min.
ChanceMedium
Related games
Aluette • Truc • Truco • Vitou

Etymology edit

The name Put, pronounced "uh" like the "u" in the English village of Putney,[3] derives from "putting up your cards in case", if you do not like them, or from "putting each other to the shift".[4][a] Cotton spells it Putt.[5]

History edit

Put is mentioned as early as 1662 where the opening line of a poem, The Riddle, says "S-hall's have a Game at Put, to pass away the time..." It appears in a compendium of poems and songs from the period 1639–1661.[6] The rules of Put are recorded as early as the 1670s by Willughby and Cotton.[7][5] At that time it was considered a very disreputable game, "the ordinary rooking game of every place", rooking meaning "cheating". Its reputation was such that Crawley (1876) cites an early play as saying "if you want to be robbed, my son, play Put in a tavern."[8] It was a game of the servants' quarters along with Loo, Whist and All Fours.[9] Cotton's rules were reprinted in various editions of The Compleat Gamester until 1750 and sporadically copied into the 19th century. No new information appears until around 1800 with Pigott and Jones' versions of Hoyle's Games.[10][11] During the 19th century most sources copy these texts almost verbatim. Put died out during the 19th century, but not before having influenced Brag.[12]

Put (17th/18th century) edit

The following description is based on the two earliest sources: Willughby (1672) and Cotton (1674).[7][5] Put was almost invariably a two-hand game, although Willughby includes extra rules for any number of players and Cotton suggests three may also play. A full 52-card English pattern pack is used with cards ranking in the unusual order of 3-2-A-K-Q-J-T-9-8-7-6-5-4 in each suit. The game is won by the first player to score 5 points (a "Putt")[5] or 7 points[7] over as many deals as necessary.

The player drawing the highest Put-card (Threes high, Fours low) deals first, and the deal then alternates. The dealer shuffles and non-dealer cuts. The dealer then gives three cards each, singly, non-dealer first. If there are more players, cards are dealt in clockwise order and the deal passes to the left each time.

Non-dealer leads to the first trick. Players may always play any card; there are no trumps and no requirement to follow suit. The trick is taken by the higher card, and the winner of a trick leads to the next. If cards of equal rank are played e.g. two Threes or two Aces, the trick is tied. It is laid to one side and belongs to neither player. The same player then leads again.

A player winning 2 o of the 3 tricks scores 1 point towards game. If each player wins a trick and the third is tied, it is "trick and tye" and neither scores.

A player with a strong hand could say "Put" before playing to a trick. If the opponent declines, the 'putter' scores 1 point. If the opponent says "I see it", they play on and the one who takes most tricks wins the whole game, the Put, i.e. 5 or 7 points. There is no option to fold unless one's opponent has said "Put".

Cotton's account of 1674 is reprinted until 1750 and appears again in Bohn (1850) and no other descriptions appear during the 18th century.

Put (19th century) edit

Pigott (1800) introduces new information. For the first time, methods of keeping score are described: whist counters, money as counters, chalking or drawing 5 lines or strokes with a pencil or chalk and erasing 1 line per point; the first to erase all 5 winning the game.[10]

In terms of play; a player can "throw up his cards", i.e. fold, on viewing the cards dealt or before playing a card to a trick, thus conceding 1 point to the opponent. Otherwise there is no practical change to the rules, a player being allowed to challenge with "I put" which, if accepted, means they will both play for the game.

For the first time four-handed Put is described, whereby each person has a partner and when the cards are dealt, one partner gives the other their best card and throws the others two away; the partner receiving the card discards their worst card and a two-hand game is then played as normal.

Strategy edit

Considerable daring is necessary in this game, for a bold player will often "Put" upon very bad cards in order to tempt the adversary into giving him a point. Sometimes the hand is played with "Putting", when the winner of the three tricks, or of two out of three, scores 1 point. The best cards are first: the Threes, next the Twos, and then the Aces; the Kings, Queens, Knaves, and Tens following in order down to the Four, which is the lowest card in the pack.[13]

Variants edit

One variant of the game is to shorten the pack to 32 cards by stripping out all the lower ranks from Four to Nine.[2]

Le Truc edit

In his book A Gamut of Games, Sid Sackson describes a French game called Le Truc, which he translates as "The Knack". This is played with a 32-card pack ranking 6-7-A-K-Q-J-T-9. The winning of two tricks, or one and two ties, scores 1 point. When about to play to a trick, a player may propose to double the value of the hand, allowing the other to throw in his hand to prevent the double from taking effect. The first to reach 12 points wins the game, and the first to win two games wins the rubber. The French version of Truc is closely related to the English Put.[14]

Four-handed Put edit

Four-handed Put differs only in that any two of the players give each his best card to his partner, who then lays out one of his or her cards, and the game then proceeds as in two-handed Put.

In literature edit

The game of Put appears in a "riddle", or acrostic, probably written by a Royalist in the interval between the resignation of Richard Cromwell on May 25, 1659 and the restoration of Charles II, crowned at Westminster Abbey on 23 April 1661. It expresses in enigmatical terms the designs and hopes of the King's adherents, under colour of describing a game of "Put". The poem is as follows:[15]

S-hall's have a Game at Put, to pass away the time ?
X-pect no foul-play; though I do play the Knave
I-have a King at hand, yea, that I have:
C-Cards be true, then the Game is mine.
R-ejoyce my heart, to see thee then repine.
A-that's lost, that's Cuckold's luck.
T-rey comes like Quarter, to pull down the Buck.

The initial letters of the seven verses are an anagram, and indicate the number of cards shared between the two players in the game. S, X, I, C, R, A, T, make SIX CART, or six cartes (six cards). Six cards, also, are expressly mentioned in the riddle itself, namely: "the Knave" (line 2), "a King" (3), "Heart" (5), "Trey", "Quarter" or quatre, and "the Buck" (7). "The Buck", probably one of the picture-cards, or the ace, inferior to "Trey", which is the best card in the game of put; therefore "Trey" comes "to pull down the Buck".

"The Buck" is an old English synonym for the Coarse Appellation, intended, no doubt, for a Puritan, or for the Puritan party. "Pulling down the Buck", is also an allusion to hunting.

John Dickson Carr's novel The Devil in Velvet, set in 1675 London, includes a scene at Whitehall Palace in which the King's mistress Nell Gwyn and the courtier Ralph Montague play Put with stakes in the thousands of guineas. Gwyn is depicted as saying she prefers Put to other card games such as Ombre which are "too slow".

The game of Put also appears in "The English Rogue", written by the Irish author Richard Head. He also describes the rules of the game played during his time.[16]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ And thus like the "u" in "putt", the golf stroke.

References edit

  1. ^ Parlett (1992), p. 228
  2. ^ a b Parlett (1995), pp. 27–28.
  3. ^ Latham (1850), p. 40.
  4. ^ The Sporting Magazine (1798), p. 81.
  5. ^ a b c d Cotton (1674), pp. 131–137.
  6. ^ Rump (1662), p. 49.
  7. ^ a b c Willughby (1672)
  8. ^ Crawley (1876), p.
  9. ^ Barrington (1787), p.
  10. ^ a b Pigott (1800), pp. 204–207.
  11. ^ Jones (1800), pp. 306–307.
  12. ^ Parlett (1990), pp. 169–170.
  13. ^ Dick (1868), pp. 201–202.
  14. ^ "How to Play Le Truc" Retrieved 31 January 2020.
  15. ^ Notes and Queries. Oxford University Press. 1859. p. 282.
  16. ^ Head (1668).

Literature edit

  • _ (1662). Rump: or an Exact Collection of the Choycest Poems and Songs Relating to the Late Times. By the most Eminent Wits, from AD 1639 to Anno 1661. London: Henry Bromen and Henry Marsh.
  • _ (1798). The Sporting Magazine, Vol. XI. London: J. Wheble.
  • _ (1859). Notes and Queries. London: Bell & Daldy, Jan-Jul 1859.
  • Cotton, Charles (1674) The Compleat Gamester. London: A.M.
  • Head, Richard (1668). The English Rogue, London: Francis Kirkman.
  • Jones, Charles (1800). Hoyle's Games Improved. London: Ritchie.
  • Parlett, David (1992). Oxford Dictionary of Card Games. Oxford: OUP. ISBN 0-19-869173-4
  • Parlett, David (1995). Teach Yourself Card Games. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-59204-4
  • Pigott, Charles (1800). Pigott's New Hoyle. London: Ridgway.
  • "Trumps" [ Dick, William Brisbane ] (1868). The Modern Pocket Hoyle. NY: Dick and Fitzgerald.
  • Willughby, Francis. A Volume of Plaies. (Manuscript in the Middleton collection, University of Nottingham, shelfmark Li 113.) c1665-70. published in Francis Willughby's Book of Games in 2003 by Jeff Forgeng, Dorothy Johnston and David Cram (2003). Ashgate Press. ISBN 1 85928 460 4.(2003).
  • Latham, Robert Gordon (1850). A Grammar of the English Language for Commercial Schools. London: Taylor, Walter & Maberly.

External links edit


card, game, occasionally, putt, english, tavern, game, first, recorded, 16th, century, later, castigated, 17th, century, moralists, repute, belongs, very, ancient, family, trick, taking, card, games, bears, close, similarities, group, known, truc, trut, truque. Put occasionally Putt is an English tavern game first recorded in the 16th century 1 and later castigated by 17th century moralists as one of ill repute 2 It belongs to a very ancient family of trick taking card games and bears close similarities a group known as Truc Trut Truque also Tru and the South American game Truco Its more elaborate cousin is the Catelan and Spanish game of Truc which is still much played in many parts of Southern France and Spain PutThe tavern game of ill repute The highest ranking cards are the ThreesOriginEnglandAlternative namesPuttTypeVying gameFamilyTrick takingPlayers2 4SkillsTactics amp StrategyCards52DeckEnglishRank high low 3 2 A K Q J T 9 8 7 6 5 4PlayClockwisePlaying time15 min ChanceMediumRelated gamesAluette Truc Truco Vitou Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Put 17th 18th century 4 Put 19th century 5 Strategy 6 Variants 6 1 Le Truc 6 2 Four handed Put 7 In literature 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 Literature 12 External linksEtymology editThe name Put pronounced uh like the u in the English village of Putney 3 derives from putting up your cards in case if you do not like them or from putting each other to the shift 4 a Cotton spells it Putt 5 History editPut is mentioned as early as 1662 where the opening line of a poem The Riddle says S hall s have a Game at Put to pass away the time It appears in a compendium of poems and songs from the period 1639 1661 6 The rules of Put are recorded as early as the 1670s by Willughby and Cotton 7 5 At that time it was considered a very disreputable game the ordinary rooking game of every place rooking meaning cheating Its reputation was such that Crawley 1876 cites an early play as saying if you want to be robbed my son play Put in a tavern 8 It was a game of the servants quarters along with Loo Whist and All Fours 9 Cotton s rules were reprinted in various editions of The Compleat Gamester until 1750 and sporadically copied into the 19th century No new information appears until around 1800 with Pigott and Jones versions of Hoyle s Games 10 11 During the 19th century most sources copy these texts almost verbatim Put died out during the 19th century but not before having influenced Brag 12 Put 17th 18th century editThe following description is based on the two earliest sources Willughby 1672 and Cotton 1674 7 5 Put was almost invariably a two hand game although Willughby includes extra rules for any number of players and Cotton suggests three may also play A full 52 card English pattern pack is used with cards ranking in the unusual order of 3 2 A K Q J T 9 8 7 6 5 4 in each suit The game is won by the first player to score 5 points a Putt 5 or 7 points 7 over as many deals as necessary The player drawing the highest Put card Threes high Fours low deals first and the deal then alternates The dealer shuffles and non dealer cuts The dealer then gives three cards each singly non dealer first If there are more players cards are dealt in clockwise order and the deal passes to the left each time Non dealer leads to the first trick Players may always play any card there are no trumps and no requirement to follow suit The trick is taken by the higher card and the winner of a trick leads to the next If cards of equal rank are played e g two Threes or two Aces the trick is tied It is laid to one side and belongs to neither player The same player then leads again A player winning 2 o of the 3 tricks scores 1 point towards game If each player wins a trick and the third is tied it is trick and tye and neither scores A player with a strong hand could say Put before playing to a trick If the opponent declines the putter scores 1 point If the opponent says I see it they play on and the one who takes most tricks wins the whole game the Put i e 5 or 7 points There is no option to fold unless one s opponent has said Put Cotton s account of 1674 is reprinted until 1750 and appears again in Bohn 1850 and no other descriptions appear during the 18th century Put 19th century editPigott 1800 introduces new information For the first time methods of keeping score are described whist counters money as counters chalking or drawing 5 lines or strokes with a pencil or chalk and erasing 1 line per point the first to erase all 5 winning the game 10 In terms of play a player can throw up his cards i e fold on viewing the cards dealt or before playing a card to a trick thus conceding 1 point to the opponent Otherwise there is no practical change to the rules a player being allowed to challenge with I put which if accepted means they will both play for the game For the first time four handed Put is described whereby each person has a partner and when the cards are dealt one partner gives the other their best card and throws the others two away the partner receiving the card discards their worst card and a two hand game is then played as normal Strategy editConsiderable daring is necessary in this game for a bold player will often Put upon very bad cards in order to tempt the adversary into giving him a point Sometimes the hand is played with Putting when the winner of the three tricks or of two out of three scores 1 point The best cards are first the Threes next the Twos and then the Aces the Kings Queens Knaves and Tens following in order down to the Four which is the lowest card in the pack 13 Variants editOne variant of the game is to shorten the pack to 32 cards by stripping out all the lower ranks from Four to Nine 2 Le Truc edit In his book A Gamut of Games Sid Sackson describes a French game called Le Truc which he translates as The Knack This is played with a 32 card pack ranking 6 7 A K Q J T 9 The winning of two tricks or one and two ties scores 1 point When about to play to a trick a player may propose to double the value of the hand allowing the other to throw in his hand to prevent the double from taking effect The first to reach 12 points wins the game and the first to win two games wins the rubber The French version of Truc is closely related to the English Put 14 Four handed Put edit Four handed Put differs only in that any two of the players give each his best card to his partner who then lays out one of his or her cards and the game then proceeds as in two handed Put In literature editThe game of Put appears in a riddle or acrostic probably written by a Royalist in the interval between the resignation of Richard Cromwell on May 25 1659 and the restoration of Charles II crowned at Westminster Abbey on 23 April 1661 It expresses in enigmatical terms the designs and hopes of the King s adherents under colour of describing a game of Put The poem is as follows 15 S hall s have a Game at Put to pass away the time X pect no foul play though I do play the Knave I have a King at hand yea that I have C Cards be true then the Game is mine R ejoyce my heart to see thee then repine A that s lost that s Cuckold s luck T rey comes like Quarter to pull down the Buck The initial letters of the seven verses are an anagram and indicate the number of cards shared between the two players in the game S X I C R A T make SIX CART or six cartes six cards Six cards also are expressly mentioned in the riddle itself namely the Knave line 2 a King 3 Heart 5 Trey Quarter or quatre and the Buck 7 The Buck probably one of the picture cards or the ace inferior to Trey which is the best card in the game of put therefore Trey comes to pull down the Buck The Buck is an old English synonym for the Coarse Appellation intended no doubt for a Puritan or for the Puritan party Pulling down the Buck is also an allusion to hunting John Dickson Carr s novel The Devil in Velvet set in 1675 London includes a scene at Whitehall Palace in which the King s mistress Nell Gwyn and the courtier Ralph Montague play Put with stakes in the thousands of guineas Gwyn is depicted as saying she prefers Put to other card games such as Ombre which are too slow The game of Put also appears in The English Rogue written by the Irish author Richard Head He also describes the rules of the game played during his time 16 See also editPrimero Truco Poker GiletFootnotes edit And thus like the u in putt the golf stroke References edit Parlett 1992 p 228 a b Parlett 1995 pp 27 28 Latham 1850 p 40 The Sporting Magazine 1798 p 81 a b c d Cotton 1674 pp 131 137 Rump 1662 p 49 a b c Willughby 1672 Crawley 1876 p Barrington 1787 p a b Pigott 1800 pp 204 207 Jones 1800 pp 306 307 Parlett 1990 pp 169 170 Dick 1868 pp 201 202 How to Play Le Truc Retrieved 31 January 2020 Notes and Queries Oxford University Press 1859 p 282 Head 1668 Literature edit 1662 Rump or an Exact Collection of the Choycest Poems and Songs Relating to the Late Times By the most Eminent Wits from AD 1639 to Anno 1661 London Henry Bromen and Henry Marsh 1798 The Sporting Magazine Vol XI London J Wheble 1859 Notes and Queries London Bell amp Daldy Jan Jul 1859 Cotton Charles 1674 The Compleat Gamester London A M Head Richard 1668 The English Rogue London Francis Kirkman Jones Charles 1800 Hoyle s Games Improved London Ritchie Parlett David 1992 Oxford Dictionary of Card Games Oxford OUP ISBN 0 19 869173 4 Parlett David 1995 Teach Yourself Card Games London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 59204 4 Pigott Charles 1800 Pigott s New Hoyle London Ridgway Trumps Dick William Brisbane 1868 The Modern Pocket Hoyle NY Dick and Fitzgerald Willughby Francis A Volume of Plaies Manuscript in the Middleton collection University of Nottingham shelfmark Li 113 c1665 70 published in Francis Willughby s Book of Games in 2003 by Jeff Forgeng Dorothy Johnston and David Cram 2003 Ashgate Press ISBN 1 85928 460 4 2003 Latham Robert Gordon 1850 A Grammar of the English Language for Commercial Schools London Taylor Walter amp Maberly External links editPut at pagat com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Put card game amp oldid 1182610593, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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