See “[Bridgeboard],” “[Capie Hole],” “[Hundreds].”
Honey Pots
[[Play]]
—London (J. P. Emslie).
A number of children stoop down in a row, clasping their hands under their legs. One child stands in front of them, and acts as owner or seller; another acts as purchaser ([fig. 1]). The purchaser inquires—
Have you any honey pots for sale?
Yes, plenty; will you walk round and taste them?
The purchaser goes round, pretending to taste each one in turn, inquiring the price and weight; finds fault with several, one being too sweet and the other not fresh enough, and so on. When one honey pot is discovered to the purchaser’s taste, she is lifted by the purchaser and owner, or by two children who act as weights or scales, and then swung by her arms backwards and forwards to estimate her weight and price ([fig. 2]). As long as the child can keep her hands clasped, so long is the swinging kept up; and as many times as they count, so many is the number of pounds she weighs. The seller sometimes said, when each one was bought—