"Barley," said in a game. When we were kids in the early sixties and playing "Kick the Can," on the Rec., we used to say, "Barley" when we got back to the tin. This meant that you could not be tigged,( "Tig" to tap on the body and that person thereby being caught.) For years I had wondered why we said, "Barley." Why such a strange word? It was only after watching, " The Pirates of the Carribean" that I realized the word's meaning, for in that film one of the characters said,"Parley," which meant that they had entered into a truce and therefore could not be harmed. Barley is a corruption of this word. The modern definition is, "to hold an informal conference with an enemy under a truce, as between active hostilities," exactly the situation in the games. How come we had got hold of such a word? It was used in all games where getting back to base without being caught meant that you were untouchable.
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