Devil among the tailors
Devil among the tailors is a pub game which is a form of table skittles.
The game involves nine small skittles arranged in a 3 × 3 square, usually within a shallow open-topped wooden box sitting on a table-top. The wooden ball (about the size of a golf ball) hangs from a string or chain attached to the top of a vertical wooden post rising from one corner of the box. The aim of the game is to knock down the skittles by swinging the ball in an arc round the post (rather than aiming directly at the skittles).
It is also the name of a game in which each player spins a spinning top with a string, to knock down skittles, earning points for doing so. This game is quite a large table game, around 1M × 1.5M The game may be referred to as "De'il Among the Tailors" in Scotland. An example of this game is on display in Osterley Manor in London.
The game can be seen in a pub setting in the Beatles film A Hard Day's Night at the 1 hour 4 minute mark. Ringo goes AWOL from a gig and ends up annoying people playing various pub games.
Name origins
On 15 August 1805, a play called The Tailors: A Tragedy for Warm Weather, starring William Dowton, was presented at the theatre, then known as The Little Theatre in the Hay. The London tailors took exception to this satire on their craft, and thousands rioted, both inside and outside the theatre. The special constables were helpless against the overwhelming odds, so a troop of Life Guards was called. Sixteen prisoners were taken and the rest dispersed. The Life Guards did their job so effectively that it was likened to a skittle ball ploughing through the skittles. Thereafter, the game of Table Skittles (or Bar Skittles) was often referred to as ‘Devil Amongst the Tailors’ (or Devil Among the Tailors). Fairburn's edition of the play is entitled The Devil among the Tailors, it includes an account of the event.[1]
In the picturesque name, the 'devil' refers to the ball and the 'tailors' are the skittles.
Alternative meaning
There is also a type of firework, of English origin, with the same name. It typically comprises a number of fountains surrounding a single mine. The fountains spray sparks upwards, and to finish the mine sends many small stars skywards.
References
- ↑ Brewer
Sources
- Finn, Timothy: Pub Games of England (Oleander Press)