THE MORRIS AND SWORD
DANCES OF ENGLAND
ARTHUR PECK
I bought this book from the Bagman 27 May 1972 in Sedlescombe and took photographs with my children beside me on that rainy day
What Morris Dancing is and is not
orris dancing is not an antiquarian revival or an
attempt to resusciate something that is dead and buried. It
is as much alive and as much a normal part of contemporary
life as cricket or football, or any other such form of
activity - although, fortunately, it has no 'professionals'.
The men who dance the Morris do so because they enjoy
dancing it (and also because they find that others enjoy
watching it). Morris dancers are now a fairly familiar sight
all over the country, and you are quite likely to come
across a team dancing when you are out and about, especially
during the summer months.
Older than Cricket
Although you might not guess it
simply from watching the dances, the Morris has a very ancient
history, so ancient that its origins are lost in the distant
past. It is much older, for instance, than cricket and most of
our well-known sports, and until about a hundred years ago
most of the Cotswold villages had their own Morris sides, each
dancing its own local variants of the Morris dances. The
traditional time for Morris dancing in that part of the
country was Whitsun, and some teams used to spend the whole of
Whitsun week touring and dancing in their own neighbourhood.
Nowadays we dance at all times of the year, indoors and out.
Survival through bad times
The changes in social conditions
during the last century had a bad effect on the Cotswold
Morris, and many villages gave it up altogether. But in some
villages where there happened to be a man of enthusiasm and
determination, the Morris was able to persist through these
changes and upheavals and through two world wars. For
instance, at Bampton, near Witney in Oxfordshire, it was
William Wells (who died in November 1953 at the age of 85) who
for over fifty years as dancer and fiddler ensured that the
Bampton Morris should go on, and every Whitmonday the Bampton
dancers can be see dancing in the streets and gardens of their
own town. At Headington, near Oxford, William Kimber was the
driving force, and not only the present Headington Quarry
team, which has a nationwide reputation, but Morris men all
over the country are greatly indebeted to him, for throughout
his long life he was always ready to help them to the utmost
of his ability. He lived to reach the age of 89, and was thus
a most important link between the older and younger
generations of dancers. By a remarkable coincidence, as will
be see from the next paragraph, he died on Boxing Day 1961, 62
years to the day after his first meeting with Cecil Sharp,
about whom we must now go on to speak.
Cecil Sharp
At Christmas 1899 Cecil Sharp
happened to be staying at Headington. On Boxing Day he looked
out of the drawing.room window and saw a curious procession of
men in white clothes coming up the drive. It was the
Headington Quarry Morris side, William Kimber among them,
coming to give a performance of their dances (at the wrong
time of year, because they were out of work, and wanted to
turn an honest penny). This meeting was the beginning of a
lifelong friendship between Cecil Sharp and William Kimber,
and was also the beginning of Cecil Sharp's great work of
rediscovering the Morris dances. During the following years,
he visited village after village in the Cotswolds, finding the
old dancers, learning from them the tunes and steps and
figures of their dances, and then teaching them to others. He
did the same in the North-East of England, where he found many
traditional Sword-dance teams. Without Cecil Sharp's
persistence and enthusiasm, not only in collecting and
learning the dances but also in getting other peple to dance
them, most of the Morris might have been lost for ever. By
means of the Society which he founded in 1911 (the English
Folk Dance Society, later amalgamated with the Folk Song
Society) he spread the knowledge and practice of the dances.
Cecil Sharp died in 1924, and a few years later, in his
memory, Cecil Sharp House was erected in Regents' Park Road in
London, as a centre for traditional dancing and singing. You
may have heard of the great annual festivals of folk dances
which take place in the Albert Hall early in the year. These
are organised by the English Folk Dance and Song Society, and
some Morris and Sword dances are always included in the
programme.
The Morris Men's Clubs
In course of time, as knowledge
of the dances spread and as enthusiasm increased, a number of
Morris men's Clubs came into existence. There were only a few
of these Clubs at first, but now they are to be found in many
parts of the country. These Clubs meet regularly for
practices, and to give shows in the open, and some Clubs
undertake tours lasting for several days, dancing in towns and
villages. You may well see sides from some of these Clubs
dancing in various places during the summer. Each Club is
independent, makes its own plans, and elects its own officers,
who are usually two in number, the Squire (or President), and
the Bagman (Secretary and Treasurer), The same titles were
adopted for the officers of the Ring at its foundation. Each
Club has its own variant of the Morris costumes; in time you
will be able to recognise some of them by their baldricks
(not, not braces!) and by the designs on their
jackets.
The Morris Ring
In 1934 representatives from six
of these early Clubs met and decided to institute The Morris
Ring, which was intended to be a federation of the Morris
Clubs all over the country. The six founder Clubs were
Cambridge, Letchworth, Thaxted, Oxford, East Surrey, and
Greensleeves. During the following years the number of Clubs
associated in the Morris Ring has increased to over seventy;
an increase which far exceeded anything which the original
founders of the Ring could foresee.
Morris Ring Gatherings
It has become customary for the
Morris Ring to organise two or three week-end gatherings every
year, at which men from various Clubs may meet and dance
together. At some of these meetings there have been nearly
four hundred dancers present. On the Saturday the teams
separate into groups to visit the surrounding villages, and
then reassemble in the central town or city for a public
display, followed by a supper together. These meas continue
such customs as the Kirtlington (Oxon) Lamb Ale, held annually
in the weeks following Whitsun week until about the middle of
the last century, which was attended by Morris sides from many
miles around. Perhaps the best known of the Ring Meetings is
the spring meeting at Thaxted in Essex, but the first Thaxted
meeting was held in 1927, seven years before the foundation of
the Morris Ring.
The Ring's Coming of Age
To celebrate the Ring's coming
of age, meetings and displays of Morris dancing were arranged
in many different places during 1955; among them were London,
Cambridge, Thaxted, the Cotswolds, Lichfield and Manchester.
The week-end meeting in London in July 1955 was attended by
over 350 men (dancers and musicians). The purpose of this
brochure, which was originally prepared for the coming-of-age
celebrations, is to enable those who see the dancing to
understand something of what it means to us and what lies
behind it - and also to share something of our hope for what
lies before it, for experience leads us to believe that as
more men come to see the Morris and to realise the interest
and fascination of it, more and more Clubs will spring up all
over the country.
Varieties of the Morris and its Music
The Cotswold Morris
No one knows for certain the
origin of the name, but there is no doubt what the Morris is.
One well-known variety of it is that which originally belonged
to the Cotswolds. The side or team consists of six dancers,
the musicians and the Fool. The instruments most generally
favoured (known in Oxfordshire as the whittle and dub), the
fiddle and the concertinas. All of these, with the addition of
the accordion, are used today. Many of the tunes used for the
dances are not otherwise known, and are of remote antiquity;
others have been borrowed and adapted from popular songs at
various periods. Two other important features of the Morris
are the Cake, carried round impaled on a sword, portions of it
being distributed to the spectators to show their appreciation
of the performance. The tunes and steps and dances of each
village differed slightly from those of other villages; hence
we have the various 'traditions', called after the names of
the villages to which they belong. The most important of these
are Headington (near Oxford); Campton (Oxon); field Town (or
Leafeild, near Burford, Oxon); Longborough (near
Stow-on-the-Wold, Glos); Bledlington (also near Stow);
Abingdon (Berks); Adderbury (Oxon); Buchnell (near bicester,
Oxon); Sherborne (Glos); Ilmington (Warwickshire); Eynsham
(Oxon); Brackley (Northants). Any programme of Morris dances
which you see is almost certain to include dances from some of
these 'traditions'.
It will be noticed that some of the dances are handkerchief dances, some are hand-clapping dances, and some are stick-clapping dances.
In addition to the set-dances for six men, the Costwold Morrise also includes Jigs for a single dancer, or for a pair of dancers. These jigs give the good dancers an opportunity of displaying their skill, and provide a change for the spectators and a relief for the rest of the dancers.
Dances with affinities to the Cotswold Morris have been discovered in Worcestershire and Herefordshire, and even as far north as Lichfield in Staffordshire. Lichfield has a repertoire of dances of outstanding interest. Another important and unique traditional dance, of a different character, survives in Staffordshire. This is the well-known Abbots Bromley Horn Dance. which is performed annually in September. Here the chief dancers carry reindeer horns, which when not in use are kept in the church.
The Derbyshire Morris
The dances of Derbyshire are
somewhat different in type from those of the Cotswolds and
require up to sixteen dancers. The set dances are more similar
in form to reels and country dances; and the processional
dances, which are a feature of the Derbyshire Morris, are
particularly effective. Bells are not an original part of the
equipment of these traditions, though they have been adopted
in recent years. Examples of the Derbyshire Morris are the
Processional dance from Tideswell, and the Processional and
other dances from Winster.
The Lancashire and Cheshire Morris
The Lancashire and Cheshire
Morris belongs principally to the industrial towns, and was in
full vigour about the middle of the nineteenth century. Many
teams continued until 1914, and several were still dancing
after 1919. In type it is similar to the Derbyshire Morris,
but there is more 'stepping', and the general effect is more
spectauculr. The dress of the dancers is perhaps the most
elaborate and colourful of all English dancers' costumes, and
the effect of the stepping is accentuated by the fancy clogs
which are word. Instead of the handkerchiefs and sticks used
by the Cotswold dancers the Lancashire men carry 'slings' of
untwisted cotton rope, or 'tiddlers' which are made of rope
bound with coloured ribbons. Some teams carry short sticks
bound in a similar way, but these are never struck together.
A typical example of the Lancashire Morris is the Mossley Dance, which requires a minimum of nine men. One of these is the Leader, who does not take a great part in the actual dance, but calls the figures, or indicates a change of figure by blowing a whistle. Sometimes he will execute more complicated steps while the other dancers are performing a figure.
The musical accompaniment is often several concertinas and a drum. The Manley Morris Men are a traditional team, whose dance originally came from the Royton district. Another traditional team shown is the Britannia Coco-nut dancers from Bacup. This dance is a unique variety of the Morris within the Lancashire tradition.
In the old days the Lancashire Morris was often associationed with the rushcart processions during Wakes Week.
Sword Dances
Although we do not now normally
think of the Sword dances as Morris dances, the sword-dancers
used to be called Morris dancers in their own localities, and
there are a number of traditional teams still active. One or
more of these dances are often practiced and performed by some
of the Morris Men's Clubs, and some Clubs make sword-dancing
their chief activity.
There are two types of English Sword Dance:
1. The Long-sword Dance, which is performed by six or eight men, who carry rigid swords, from 30 to 4 inches long, made either of steel or wood. The dancers begin by clashing their swords together, after which they line up in a ring or in pairs, and perform intricate figures during which they pass over or under the swords; finally they plait the swords into a star-shaped Lock which is held aloft at the climax of the dance. Their leader is often called the King, and he sometimes takes part in a play with the non-dancing members of the party, the Clowns (Fools), one or more, and the 'Betty' (man-woman).
The usual time for the performance of this type of dance is about Christmas, but in some districts it is associated with the Plough Stots, and is seen round about Plough Monday, the Monday after Twelfth Night (Epiphany). Although it was once practiced throughout Yorkshire and the adjacent counties east f the Pennines, traditional performers of the dance are now found only in two ares, round Sheffield and in the Cleveland district of North Yorkshire, where there are a number of teams, particularly in the iron-mining villages. Because the swords form a rigid link between the dancers, the Long-sword Dance, in order to be effective, requires a igher degree of coordination than any other form of Morris, and owing to this and the control needed for executing the comparatively slow movements it is not often performed by non-traditional teams.
2. The Short-sword or Rapper Dante. The 'rappers' used in this dance are flexible and have two handles, and the hild-and-point ring of dancers normally consists of five men, accompanied by two additional characters, teh 'Tommy' and the 'Betty', each of whom also carried a rapper, and in some traditions they join in skilfully with the main dancers towards the conclusion of the dance.
The Rapper Dance is found in a limited area along the Tyneside in Northumberland and County Durham. Fifteen of the twenty-nine known rapper traditions have been found within a circly only a few miles in diameter. The long-sword dances of Yorkshire (and of southern County Durham) have close parallels in Germany and elsewhere, but nothing comparable with the rapper dance is known. There is nothing quite like it for speed and complexity among the traditional ceremonial dances of Europe. Although there are not written records of it before the seventeenth century, in all probability it is of very ancient origin. The credit for maintaining this unique Christmastide custom belongs to the coal-miners of Tyneside.
A sword-dance recently discovered at Greatham, County Durham, is an interesting link between these two main types of sword-dances.
A distinctive feature of the Sword dances, which recurs a number of times during any performance, is the Lock or Nut, in which the swords are plaited together. One such 'lock' has been adopted as its badge by the English Folk Dance and Song Society, and you often see members wearing it.
The English Sword dances muct be clearly distinguied from the Scottish Sword dance, in which the sowrds are not held in the hands but two swords are laid crosswise on the ground, and the dancer performs his steps over and between the swords. The corresponding English dance is the Bacca Pipes Jig, danced over two churchwarden pipes laid crosswise, which is sometimes performed in our shows.
The Present
Morris dancing is more popular
today than ever before, and the Clubs (now over seventy in
number) are spread over most parts of the country. Their
number is continually increasing: in its twenty-first year the
Ring admitted to association eith new Clubs, the highest entry
in any one year since its foundation. Much, therefore, is
being done to ensure the continuity of the tradition of
English Morris and Sword dancing, and on this score an
important contribution is being made by the junior teams
connected with several of the Clubs, some of which are
regularly see at Morris Ring meetings.
The Future
We hope that you will enjoy
seeing the dances, and perhaps come of you will feel that you
would like to begin dancing yourselves, or to learn to play
for the dancers. If so, there may be a Club near where you
live, whose practices you might be able to attend. Write to
the Bagman (i.e. Secretary) of the Morris Ring, C/O Cecil
Sharp House, 2 Regents Park Road, London, N.W.2
Sword Dancers.
I used these photographs for years when teaching Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, the knot of swords being the device on Sir Gawain's shield of the endless knot, the dancers exclaiming 'A nut, a nut!'
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Cotswold Morris Dancers, the two groups traveling together and performing in Sussex villages that May
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The Bagman, Dancing and Twirling his Umbrella
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On playfulness see also https://www.umilta.net/playshool.html and https://www.umilta.net/promptorium.html
See also: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2009/feb/07/morris-dancing-lucy-neal-victorian?CMP=share_btn_fb
Berea College in
Kentucky has a fine Cecil Sharp Collection in its library, as
he went there to collect English Appalachian folk music, which
we were taught in schools in England. Though in the
slave-owning Southern States, his Bible is on display in the
Library where every reference to 'slave' had been cut out and
removed.
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