Ace of hearts

The ace of hearts (A♥) is a card in a deck of playing cards: the ace in the suit of hearts (♥). There is one ace of hearts in a standard deck of 52 cards.

Ace of hearts

In games

In the 17th century French game Le Jeu de la Guerre, the ace of hearts represented the cavalry.[1]:233–4

In the game Bankafalet, the second best card in the deck is the ace of hearts.[1]:348

In the Irish game Five Cards, the ace of hearts is the second highest card in the pack, below the five fingers (aka five of trumps).[1]:340

In literature

Objects used in a 17th-century painting in the National Museum in Warsaw depicting a wedding in a peasant house are allusion to indecent final of the feast - pitcher symbolizing a woman and playing cards, a symbol of a man with ace of hearts having a clear erotic meaning and nine of club a symbolic of troubles and mental frustration.[2]

American author Zane Grey used the cartomantic meaning of playing cards in his novels. For example, in his book The Border Legion, he describes the character Joan Randle as an Ace of Hearts, after she "outwit[s] and outtalk[s] her would-be-seducer, outlaw Kells".[3]:92 The very same card is pinned by Kells to a tree, where he shoots at with many bullets, "every one of which touch[ing] the red heart and one of them...obliterat[ing] it",[3]:116 and then signs his name below. This foreshadows the climax described above. These uses of the ace of hearts by Grey utilize the many symbolic meanings of the card including intimidation, eroticism, and death.[3]:92

Referring to the Jesuits, the author of The true history of Pope Joan says: "a certain prince of ours did compare unto them a game of cardes, in which the gamesters like loadem play and bring them forth last that are of most price, to beat downe the adverse play: or like the ace of hearts at Mawe (the game which is with us called Rumstich)". This is said to provide the answer to the origin of the card game Mawe.[1]:258–9

In Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy, the murder of the main villain is given away by a spot on the ceiling that "speedily grew as large as the palm of [Mrs. Brooks'] hand" and "[Mrs. Brooks] could perceive that it was red". The narrative goes on to say: "the oblong white ceiling, with this scarlet blot in the midst, had the appearance of a gigantic ace of hearts".[4]

gollark: You could actually just use the HTTP thing to download code off pastebin too I guess.
gollark: No, you don't have access to your usual network drive.
gollark: So in theory (I said this to them, and apparently I wouldn't have enough time to cheat so it didn't matter, which would have been wrong as I in fact had lots of spare time) you could access the internet by manually sending HTTP requests from python and parsing the HTML, yes.
gollark: They "block internet access" by stopping the browsers opening. However, we can access python for obvious reasons, and python has built-in HTTP libraries.
gollark: Talking of great exam systems, I had a computer science exam today at school, and they do them partly on computers (nobody wants to write code on paper).

See also

References

  1. Singer, Samuel Weller (1816). Researches into the history of playing cards; with illustrations of the origin of printing and engraving on wood. T. Bensley and Son. p. 348. Retrieved April 16, 2012. Ace of hearts card history -fortune telling -tricks -magic.
  2. "Zabawa weselna w rodzinie chłopskiej". cyfrowe.mnw.art.pl. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  3. Kimball, Arthur G. (1993). Ace of Hearts: The Westerns of Zane Grey. TCU Press. p. 116. Retrieved April 16, 2012. Ace of hearts card history.
  4. Hardy, Thomas (2003) [1891]. Tess of the D'Urbervilles. England: Penguin Classics. p. 382. ISBN 978-0-141-43959-4.

Media related to Aces of Hearts at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.