Read The Penguin Book of Card Games: Everything You Need to Know to Play Over 250 Games Online
Authors: David Parlett
wins the pool, plus 2 from each opponent and 1 extra for each King
unplayed.
There is also a ridiculously complicated two-hand version played
with a doubled pack.
Pope Joan
Delightful Victorian family game played with an elaborate piece of
stake-and-layout equipment for which substitutes can easily be
made. The 51-card pack lacks 8, making it dif icult to play 9,
known as Pope Joan (also, in other contexts, as the Curse of
Scotland). The eight
Pope Joan. Stakes are deposited in the label ed compartments. Al
games of the Stops family involve such layouts, which may be
simply made by sticking old playing-cards on sheets of paper – or,
more elaborately but at ractively, card cut-outs in the compartments
of smal cake-baking tins.
divisionsofthe board arelabel edPope( 9), Matrimony (K-
Q),Intrigue (Q-J), Ace, King, Queen, Jack, Game. Ace is high.
Dealer starts by set ing 6 counters on Pope, 2 on Matrimony, 2 on
Intrigue, and 1 on each other. He deals al the cards around as at
Newmarket, including a dead hand. The last card of al is turned for
‘trumps’, and, if it is Pope, Ace, King, Queen or Jack, he wins the
stake from the appropriate division. Eldest leads by playing the
lowest card held of any suit he chooses. Whoever holds the next
lowest card held of any suit he chooses. Whoever holds the next
higher card of the same suit plays it, and so on until no one can
play. The last to play then starts a new sequence with the lowest
card held of any desired suit.
Whoever plays the Ace, King, Queen or Jack of trumps wins the
contents of the corresponding compartment. The contents of
Matrimony can be taken only when the same player plays both
King and Queen of the trump suit, and of Intrigue only by someone
who plays both Jack and Queen. (Anyone fortunate enough to hold
and play J-Q-K-A of trumps, therefore, col ects from six of the eight
pools.) First out wins the stake on Game. Everybody else pays him
one counter for each card remaining in his own hand, except that a
player who is left with 9 in hand is exempt from this penalty.
Unclaimed stakes are carried forward to the next deal.
Spinado
Simplified Pope Joan played with a 47-card pack made by
stripping out 8 and four Deuces. Dealer sets 12 counters on a
position marked Matrimony ( K Q), 6 on Intrigue ( Q J), and 6
on Game, and everyone else stakes 3 on Game. Deal and play as at
Newmarket. Aces are low, and are necessarily stops because there
are no Deuces. The A is known as Spinado, or Spin. Its holder
may turn any card he plays into a stop by promptly covering it with
A and declaring ‘And Spin!’ This nets him 3 counters from each
opponent, and he starts a new sequence. Anyone playing a King
immediately receives 1 counter from each opponent, or 2 for K.
The contents of Matrimony or Intrigue go only to a player able to
play both cards concerned, and the player of al three wins both
pools in addition to the K payment. First out wins the stakes on
Game, and need not then stake on it in the next deal, unless he