ins_dusty_miller
Dusty Miller
Neal 1726
Fogg & Jackson 1990
3 couple set, longways, proper, triple time
Recording: dusty_miller-074-bnntcap-12.mp3.zip
A1 12 1s lead through 2s, turn in to face up, then cast down to 3rd place A2 12 1s turn 2-hands, cast up to 2nd place & face 1st corners B1 6 1st man R-hand turn 2nd woman while 1st woman R-hand turn 3rd man 6 1s turn L-hand in 2nd place B2 6 1st man R-hand turn 3rd woman while 1st woman R-hand turn 2nd man 6 1s turn L-hand in 2nd place & face 1st corners A3 6 1st man slow set & honor 3rd woman while 1st woman slow set & honor 2nd man 6 1st man 2-hand turn 3rd woman while 1st woman 2-hand turn 2nd man A4 6 1st man slow set & honor 2nd woman while 1st woman slow set & honor 3rd man 6 1st man 2-hand turn 2nd woman while 1st woman 2-hand turn 3rd man B3 12 1st man hey w/ women, passing L-shoulder w/ 3rd woman to start while 1st woman hey w/ men, passing L-shoulders w/ 2nd man to start B4 12 1s 2-hand turn half way, lead down, 3s cast up
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SvkvYjMRrn0
Millers, whose services were indispensible in country villages, had a mixed reputation in folklore; they were widely assumed to be freethinkers, and per- haps dishonest and misanthropic in the bargain. Isaac Bickerstaffe, in Love in a Village (1762), wrote of such a miller in a song that had the famous refrain:
“I care for nobody, no not I, if nobody cares for me.” David Herd (1732-1810) recorded one set of lyrics to “The Dusty Miller” (the dust is flour):
- O the dusty miller, O the dusty miller,
- Dusty was his coat, dusty was his colour,
- Dusty was the kiss I got frae the miller!
- O the dusty miller with the dusty coat,
- He will spend a shilling ere he win a groat!
ins_dusty_miller.txt · Last modified: 2024/08/02 00:27 by 127.0.0.1