The works of Francis Rabelais, François Rabelais, 1844 (first published 1532-64)
The creativity and playfulness in Rabelais’ masterpieces Pantagruel and Gargantua made the act of writing into a game in itself (and of translation – the original was in French). The evocative vocabulary in Gargantua’s implausibly long list of games ignites the reader’s imagination and could inspire hundreds of interpretations.
![The works of Rabelais (volume 1 missing) 1.jpg](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/6063581e3e356f4ceeed1b02/1617124179450-3O7OE640MMXJ9C00HMUG/The+works+of+Rabelais+%28volume+1+missing%29+1.jpg)
![The works of Rabelais (volume 1 missing) 2.jpg](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/6063581e3e356f4ceeed1b02/1617124179456-16Y757P79QP673GXNK29/The+works+of+Rabelais+%28volume+1+missing%29+2.jpg)
![The works of Rabelais (volume 1 missing) 3.jpg](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/6063581e3e356f4ceeed1b02/1617124179586-IA5WSGY8G2J6OWFH51H2/The+works+of+Rabelais+%28volume+1+missing%29+3.jpg)
Activity
Scroll through these pages and choose a game’s title from the lists. Imagine the rules and write them out or draw a picture of people playing it.
Send your image or description to gallery@theportico.org.uk and we’ll upload a selection to the gallery below.
Try playing your new game with friends and family and let us know how you get on via Twitter (@ThePortico), Facebook (@ThePorticoLibrary) or Instagram (@PorticoLibrary).
Here are some of your games:
![The forged oak](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/6063581e3e356f4ceeed1b02/1617124179611-LMBV4XZOBXI2V194DEIH/87d127f3-136a-4faa-a448-bdf273582051.jpg)
![belly to belly.jpg](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/6063581e3e356f4ceeed1b02/1617124179630-EU3492Q37CUAVNWPASRF/belly+to+belly.jpg)