[363] Gookin, pp. 152-53.
[364] Ibid., Williams, p. 134; Wood, p. 102.
[365] Wood, p. 102.
[366] Ibid.; Pring, p. 58.
[367] Williams, p. 134.
[368] Wood says that this is so that a player would not know who to blame for any injury he might receive on the playing field.
[369] Williams, p. 196; Wood, pp. 83, 96-98.
[370] “... their swimming is not after our English fashion of spread armes and legges which they hold too tiresome, but like dogges their armes before them cutting through the liquids with their right shoulder; in this manner they swim very swift and farre....”; Wood, pp. 97-98.
[371] Ibid.
[372] Ibid., pp. 95-96.