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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246                  HURLY-BURLY-HUSTLE CAP
be broke, when they got home." It is fully described by Carew in his Survey of Cornwall, 1602, p. 73.
It is also a very ancient Irish game, and Mr. Kinahan says: "Many places are called after it: such as, Killahurla, the hurlers' church; Gortnahurla, the field of the hurlers; Greenanahurla, the sunny place of the hurlers; this, however, is now generally corrupted into hurling-green. The hurling-green where the famous match was played by the people of Wexford against those of Cather (now divided into the counties of Carlow and Wicklow), and where the former got the name of yellow bellies, from the colour of the scarfs they wore round their waist, is a sunny flat on the western side of North Wicklow Gap, on the road from Gorey to Trinnahely. There are also many other dif­ferent names that record the game."—Folk-lore Journal, ii. 266.
See "Bandy," "Camp," "Football," "Hockey," "Hood," "Shinty."
Hurly-burly
An undescribed boys' game. In it the following rhyme is
used                Hurly-burly, trumpy trace,
The cow stands in the market-place; Some goes far, and some goes near, Where shall this poor sinner steer ?
—Patterson's Antrim and Down Glossary.
For a similar rhyme see " Hot Cockles."
Huss
Children play a game which is accompanied by a song be­ginning         Hussing and bussing will not do,
But go to the gate, knock, and ring— Please, Mrs. Brown, is Nellie within ?
—Parish's Dictionary of the Sussex Dialect.
Hustle Cap
A boys' game, played by tossing up halfpence. It is men­tioned in Peregrine Pickle, cap. xvi. Cope (Hampshire Glos­sary) says, " Halfpence are placed in a cap and thrown up, a sort of ' pitch-and-toss.' "