< Collier's New Encyclopedia (1921)

KNUR AND SPELL (called by Strutt Northern Spell), an old English game played with a ball, which is risen from a trap and hit with a bat made for the purpose. The ball, called the knur, is made of wood, a little bigger than a walnut. The bat, called a tripstick, as it is also used to spring the trap or spell, consists of a piece of hard wood, 6 by 4 inches, and 1 inch thick (the pommel), attached to a supple handle from 3 to 4 feet long, which the player grasps with both hands, giving the full swing of his body with the stroke. The game consists of the cumulative distance of a given number of strokes, the player who has the greatest number of yards being the winner.

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