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Rh and the following remarkable passage proves that a term very similar to Cricket was applied to some game as far back as the thirteenth century, the identical date to which we have traced that form of cricket called club-ball and the game of handyn and handoute.

From the Gentleman's Magazine, vol. lviii. p. 1., A.D. 1788, we extract the following:—

"In the wardrobe account of the 28th year of King Edward the First, A.D. 1300, published in 1787 by the Society of Antiquaries, among the entries of money paid one Mr. John Leek, his chaplain, for the use of his son Prince Edward in playing at different games, is the following:—

"'Domino Johanni de Leek, capellano Domini Edwardi fil' ad Creag' et alios ludos per vices, per manus proprias, 100 s. Apud Westm. 10 die Aprilis, 1305."'

The writer observes, that the glossaries have been searched in vain for any other name of a pastime but cricket to which the term Creag' can apply. And why should it not be Cricket? for, we have a singular evidence that, at the same date, Merlin the Magician was a cricketer!

In the romance of "Merlin," a book in very old French, written about the time of Edward I., is the following:—

"Two of his (Vortiger's) emissaries fell in with certain children who were playing at cricket."—Quoted in Dunlop's "History of Fiction."