pall-mall, (from Italian pallamaglio: palla, “ball,” and maglio, “mallet”), obsolete game of French origin, resembling croquet. An English traveler in France mentions it early in the 17th century, and it was introduced into England in the second quarter of that century. Thomas Blount’s Glossographia (1656) described it as
a game wherein a round bowle is with a mallet struck through a high arch of iron (standing at either end of an alley) which he that can do at the fewest blows, or at the number agreed on, wins. This game was heretofore used in the long alley near St. James’s and vulgarly called Pell-Mell.
The pronunciation here described as vulgar afterward became classic, a famous London street having been named after a pall-mall alley. A ball and mallets used in the game were found in 1854 and are now in the British Museum: the mallets resemble those used in croquet, but the heads are curved; the ball is of boxwood and about six inches in circumference. The 17th-century diarist Samuel Pepys described the alley as of hard sand “dressed with powdered cockle-shells.” The length of the alley varies, the one at St. James being close to 800 yards long.