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Card terms #7
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for His Heels/His NobNow only used in Cribbage, but it seems that the origin is in the game of All-Fours. The 1754 citation is in the context of the game of All-Fours: For the Vulgar Tongue citation, the 1788 (2nd) edition does not have the term: But the 1796 (3rd) edition does: It is worth noting that both of them only give "Knob/Nob: The head.", with no definition relating to nobility or anything else. Also perhaps relevant is the definition for "Noddy":
The 1853 novel Cranford by Elizabeth Gaskell mentions the possible phrase “Jack’s up; a fig [i.e. a trifling amount, is there a more precise definition] for his heels”:
She also mentions cards in her essay The Last Generation in England, 1849:
The Anti-Jacobin published in 1799 a play “The Rovers” by a ‘Mr. Higgins’, satirizing the work of William Godwin. The second act opens with the characters playing All-Fours: William Jerdan wrote in his story Hippothanasia in 1837 that Three-Card Loo could also use the “one for his heels” rule: This story from 1815 indicates that “his heels” was known to have something to do with the fact that the Jack’s heels are prominent on older cards: |
(see “jack” thread) |
Sourcing terminology & nomenclature.
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