The Traditional Children's Games of England Scotland
& Ireland In Dictionary Form - Volume 1

With Tunes(sheet music), Singing-rhymes(lyrics), Methods Of Playing with diagrams and illustrations.

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I50                        GIANTS—GILTY-GALTY
The child goes again, and the game proceeds as above. It is generally played now as " Ghost."—A. B. Gomme. It is men­tioned by Newell (Games, p. 223).
Giants
A Giant is chosen, and he must be provided with a cave. A summer-house will do, if there is no window for the Giant to see out of. ' The others then have to knock at the door with their knuckles separately. The Giant rushes when he thinks all the children have knocked, and if he succeeds in catching one before they reach a place of safety (appointed before­hand) the captured one becomes Giant.—Bitterne, Hants (Mrs. Byford). See " Wolf."
Giddy                 Giddy giddy gande
Who stands yonder ?
Little Bessy Baker,
Pick her up and shake her;
Give her a bit of bread and cheese,
And throw her over the water.
—Warwickshire.
(b) A girl being blindfolded, her companions join hands and form a ring round her. At the word " Yonder" the blind­folded girl points in any direction she pleases, and at line three names one of the girls. If the one pointed at and the one named be the same, she is the next to be blinded; but, curi­ously enough, if they be not the same, the one named is the one. Meanwhile, at line four, she is not " picked up," but is shaken by the shoulders by the still blindfolded girl; and at line five she is given by the same " bread and cheese," i.e., the buds or young leaves of what later is called "May" (Cra­taegus oxyacantha); and at line six she is taken up under the blinded girl's arm and swung round.—Warwickshire (Notes and Queries, 6th Ser., viii. 451).
Gilty-galty (or gaulty)
A boy's game. One boy is chosen, who says:—
Gilty-galty four-and-forty, Two tens make twenty.