
Full image ... http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com ... 165537.jpg

... An interesting statement of Luther, too, points to the widespread use of playing cards in the sixteenth century.Luther: "Games with cards and dice are common, for our age has invented many games. Surely there has been a reaction. In my youth all games were prohibited; makers of cards and musicians at dances weren't admitted to the sacraments, and people were required to make confession of their gaming, dancing, and jousting. Today these things are the vogue, and they are defended as exercises for the mind." (Footnote 20)("Footnote 20:
Martin Luther, Works (American Edition), Table Talk, ed. and trans. Theodore G. Tappert (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1967), 221-22, no. 3526a. artiludia. Ludus chartiludii et tesserae est frequentissimus. Nam varios ludos invenit hos saeculum. Sie hat warlich woll geloset! Me adolescente prohibebantur omnes ludi, als das charten macher, pfeiffer nicht liess zum sacrament gehen, et cogebantur de lusu et saltatione et hastiludii spectaculo confessionem facere. Yetzund gehet es in hohem schwangk. Defendunt talia pro exercitiis ingenii." D. Martin Luthers Werke, Kritische Gesamtausgabe, Tischreden, 6 vols. [Weimar: Bohlau, 1912-21], 3: 377, no. 3526a.)
... so it's for instance not easy to decide, what Luther wanted to say with his exclamation: "Sie hat warlich wohl geloset!" This sounds, as if Luther gives a mockery about female fascination about lot books." Or Luther might enjoy, that he himself lives in a time, when playing is more allowed and interesting games are developed. It really isn't clear, who he addresses with "sie" (= she).
... so somehow better as Magdeburg). Anyway, Luther turned religious then and changed the direction of his studies. 



Return to The Researcher's Study
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests