By Dan Beard
Old Bloody Tom, Black Tom, or "Pull Away!"
What the original meaning of this last cry was, is lost in the mist that
veils so many of the expressions of boys. Old Bloody Tom and Black Tom are
probably names for an ogre, while "It," no doubt, also represents one
of these monsters. The game, under any of its names, is a simple one.
"It" stands in the middle of the street while the other players are
gathered on one of the sidewalks which form the two homes. "It" cries:
"Pull away once! Pull away twice! Pull away three times! "
At the conclusion of the last cry the other players make a rush for the
opposite sidewalk, while "It" tries to tag them. Each boy tagged joins
"It" and helps him tag the others until all are caught. The first
player caught is "It" for the next game. No boy can be tagged after he
has crossed the home curbstone or while he touches it with hand or foot, unless
all the players are on the same side of the street. In this case "It"
may tag them while on home-grounds. (See Fig. 256).

Fig. 256
In some places " It " cries:
One for the money, Two for the show, Three to make ready, And four for to
go!"
In place of "Pull away," but the game is the same, and in no
respect different from the following game of "Black Man," except in
the words used to set the boys running.
OHB