History of
solitaires
Solitaire games, also known as Patience in Britain, are card games for a single player. Does not exist a precise history of solitaires, but it is probable that
solitaires are been born with the card games. The word solitaire is of french
origin, and it means patience. It must but wait for the age of
Napoleon (is said Napoleon to have played a lot of solitaire) to see a true development of the
solitaire games.
The first book on the
argument comes printed in 1870. It was Illustrated Games of Patience by
lady Adelaide Cadogan, containing 25 games, reprinted many times. In the U.S. mrs E.D. Cheney published the successive year
the book Patience. The publishing house Dick & Fitzgerald in New York
published in 1883 a series of books dedicated to solitaire games ("Dick's
Games of Patience") and a second series was published in 1898. In the
1890's a great popularizer of the game was Miss Whitemore Jones, whose 5 volumes
on solitaires went reprint for thirty years.
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Solitaires "have a marvellous capacity both to
soothe and challenge the mind of the player" (Trevor Day and The Diagram Group, Collins Gem Patience Card
Games, HarperCollins Publishers, 1996, ISBN 0004720164, p. 3)
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"Patience is the mental equivalent of jogging:
its purpose is to tone the brain up and get rid of unsociable mental
flabbiness." (David Parlett, The Penguin Book of Patience,
Penguin Books, 1980, ISBN 0140663461, p. 11)
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"It has many virtues, not the last being that
it teaches one the self.discipline of being honest with oneself."
(George F. Hervey, The illustrated Book of Card Games for One, ISBN
0890091137, p. 7)
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