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start cybersenior.2.2
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====================================================
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************
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* THE
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* CYBERSENIOR
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* REVIEW
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************
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===================================================
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VOLUME 2 NUMBER 2 APRIL 1995
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===================================================
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The CyberSenior Review is a project of the Internet
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Elders List, an active world-wide Mailing List for
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seniors. The Review is written, edited and published
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by members of the Elders.
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Contents copyrighted 1995 by the Internet Elders List
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and by the authors. All rights reserved by the authors.
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Quoting is permitted with attribution.
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The editorial board of The CyberSenior Review:
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Elaine Dabbs edabbs@extro.ucc.su.oz.au
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Pat Davidson patd@chatback.demon.co.uk
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James Hursey jwhursey@cd.columbus.oh.us
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======================================================
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CONTENTS, Volume 2, Number 2, April 1995
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EDITORIAL by Pat Davidson
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THE HISTORY AND POETICS OF THE CINQUAIN by Jim Olson
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Jim gives a brief history and explanation of his favorite poetic form,
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with examples.
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THE EVENTS AND TIMES OF THE CEDAR BLUFF SCHOOL (PART II) by Langston Kerr
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More memories as Langston concludes his reminiscence about his
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depression-era childhood in rural Nacogdoches, Texas.
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MORRIS ON! by Eddie Dunmore
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Eddie tells us of nuts and Bessys and fools: the strange but popular
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world of morris dancing.
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CINQUAIN MADNESS by the editors
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Bonus extra! Inspired by Jim Olson's article, your editors try their
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hand at the form. Just for fun of course.
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=========================================================================
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EDITORIAL.
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By Pat Davidson.
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A cloudless azure sky, giving a day of spring sunshine to brighten the
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daffodils, camellias,and forsythia in the garden, and the fifth issue
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of the Cybersenior Review--who could ask for more?
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The springtime always reminds me of the years I spent in
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Hertfordshire, where spring is celebrated by the crowning of the May
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Queen, with the Morris dances afterwards. Eddie's article conjures up
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the memory of the spring fair and the morris dancers, the men dressed
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in white shirts and breeches, with white stockings, and ribbons and bells
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at their knees which jingled as they danced. The Fool, waving some sort
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of "balloon" attached to a stick in his hand, (somebody once told me
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the "balloon" was a pig's bladder!) mingled with the spectators,
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occasionally bumping the "balloon" on the heads of cheeky little boys.
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Spring is also the time when the children start different "crazes." Do
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you remember the bats with balls attached to the bats by elastic, or
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the hula hoops, encouraging wild gyrations? Always popular is the
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game of marbles, and Langston's description of the games he played
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brings back happy memories to us all. In the second part of the
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description of his childhood in Texas, he tells how the community
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of Cedar Bluff worked together to restore the old school as a
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community center, with his grandfather playing a major part in the
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construction. The communities of Cedar Bluff and Holly Springs still
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have the same closeness, a blessing in this day and age.
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We've been enjoying the delightful cinquains written by Jim Olson, and
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in this issue we discover the origins of the poetic form. Jim has
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encouraged us to try to write some for ourselves, so let's hope his
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article will provide even more encouragement. Note that your editors
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have taken him up on the dare.
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While we're mentioning writing, we'd be delighted to have as many
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submissions as possible for publication in the issues of the Review in
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summer, autumn and winter. There are talented people among us
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Elders, who have many and varied interests. What about sharing them
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with us in an article? If you're a bit uncertain, you can always ask
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for some help from Jim (Hursey), Elaine, or myself. We'd love to hear
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from you!
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Warmest wishes to you all,
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Pat
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=========================================================================
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THE HISTORY AND POETICS OF THE CINQUAIN
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by Jim Olson
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Poetry began as man learned to play with words and express them
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in patterns that add something to the basic meaning. That is
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still the way children learn to express poetry in their play. I
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remember the sidewalk play rhyme, "Step on a crack and break your
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mother's back," an oral form passed on from child to child
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without much concern for how it would look on a page or how the
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"lines" are arranged or, for that matter, for poor mother's spine.
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Poetry is still tied to oral expression, but has become a written
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form as well, and this written form has developed visual patterns
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to complement the oral presentation. It is generally written in
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lines and these lines have many poetic characteristics. Many
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poetic forms have developed around the concept of lines: line
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lengths, number of syllables in a line, and patterns of stress
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and pauses, all related to line structures.
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One form that has a definite line pattern and a distinctive
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visual appearance on the page is the cinquain, a five line form
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developed by the American Poet Adelaide Crapsey around the turn
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of the century. Here is a typical poem of hers:
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November Night
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Listen,
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With faint, dry sound,
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Like steps of passing ghosts,
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The leaves, frost-crisp'd break from the trees
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And fall.
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She had become fascinated by reading translations of the
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Japanese forms of the haiku and tanka, poems utilizing images of
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nature and depending on syllable count rather than rhyme. The
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haiku is arranged in three lines of 5-7-5 syllables and the
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tanka in five lines of 5-7-5-7-7 syllables, and when printed
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with traditional Japanese characters they offer a visual as well
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as oral aesthetic experience.
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Adelaide felt that the ideal short form would be brief, suggestive,
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show restraint, and contain an element of contrast. She framed
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her cinquains to achieve these goals. Taking the five-line tanka,
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she reduced the 31 syllables to 22 with a 2-4-6-8-2 pattern of
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lines and syllables. She achieved contrast by allowing only
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two syllables on the first line, followed by four, six, and
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eight syllable lines that developed images that progressively
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led up to the last line with its dramatic return to only two
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syllables. This contrast in line length was usually reinforced
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by a contrast in content, an abrupt, succinct shift
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to the poem's main concept.
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The restraint and suggestiveness was perhaps a factor in her
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thoughts about death. She had lost two of her younger siblings
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at a relatively early age and was herself aware of her ultimate
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death from tuberculosis. Her poems about death offer a variety
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of ways of approaching and suggesting her own impending death
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without proclaiming her fate or complaining about it. She even
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wrote a standard quatrain that whimsically compared her left
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lung to a garden with the bacteria as the plants. It was not one
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of her better poems.
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Her cinquains gave her the discipline and
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form to achieve her own poetic principles as in "Warning".
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Warning
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Just now
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Out of the strange
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Still dusk ... as strange as still...
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A white moth flew. Why am I grown
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So cold.
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At one time she attempted to expand the form and put three
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cinquains together into a kind of triad of cinquains to carry
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out the spring, summer, winter theme. This seems to have
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defeated some of her basic concepts and she never pursued it
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with any degree of success. Perhaps if she had lived longer we
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would now have other imaginative forms to enhance our poetry.
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The cinquain has not been used much since her death in 1914 at
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the age of 36. Those who have used it have developed their own
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variations of syllable count. Her cinquain form is a favorite
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of mine when I want to achieve some of the poetic goals she
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outlined as well as some of my own. I particularly like the
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element of contrast brought in by the last line and always look
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for some last line that is both unexpected but appropriate.
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I have written only one cinquain on her major topic, but in that
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one I have tried to follow her pattern with a less quiet and
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restrained variation, incorporating a little of Dylan Thomas.
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"Dark Flight" was the result of observing nighthawks gather as
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they do in late summer with their eerie calls echoing through
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the night as they devour night flying insects and prepare for
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migration:
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Dark Flight
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Nighthawks
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Swoop dusky skies
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Not gently calling out
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Nestings, feastings, high flights, regrets;
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Then leave.
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The form lends itself well to the computer screen, and I find it
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suitable to a variety of poetic expression. One can stay with
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the traditional Japanese aesthetic of peaceful, crisp nature
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images and Adelaide's more serious concerns, or depart from them
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and use the form for less subtle moments. The contrast of the
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last line lends itself well to a lighter mode:
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Coyote
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Stalking,
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Now listening,
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Quickly rising forward
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Paws together downward thrusting;
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Gotcha!
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However we might choose to use the cinquain, we owe a debt of
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gratitude to Adelaide Crapsey, for giving us a form to fit our
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screens and challenge our imaginations.
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------------
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Bibliography
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Crapsey, Adelaide. _A Study in English Metrics_.Boston:
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Milford House. 1972.
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Crapsey, Adelaide. _The Complete Poems and Collected Letters of
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Adelaide Crapsey_. Albany: State University of New York
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Press. 1977.
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deFord, Sarah and Lott, Clarissa Harris. _Forms of verse_ New
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York: Appleton Century Crofts. 1971.
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=====================================================================
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THE EVENTS AND TIMES OF THE CEDAR BLUFF SCHOOL (PART 2)
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by Langston Kerr
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(In Part 1, we learned of Langston's father's hard life in depression-era Texas and how his grandfather helped build the Cedar Bluff School.--Ed.)
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Part 2.
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During the Spring of 1940, a large garden was planted on the Cedar
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Bluff campus. Anything that could be raised at one's home was planted
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in the garden. The garden was 'worked' mostly by the big students
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in the upper grades during their spare time. Horses, mules and
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plows were even brought to school to work the garden, and it did
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produce.
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A new water system was installed on the campus. At the hand dug
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well, a 55 gallon barrel was mounted on a platform and a pipe was
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attached to the bottom, extended and a water faucet attached. The
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big boys would get to draw water from the well with a rope and
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bucket, fill the barrel and this would make water available to
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anyone when one wanted a drink. At recess, this was a popular
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place for a few days, and lest I forget, there were always cookies
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in the cook room at recess, or something good to eat for a bunch of
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playing kids.
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Recess was one of the more important times of the day for more
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reasons than just to get some of the goodies from the cook room.
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First, there was always the fast trip to the privy. The boys' privy
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was on one side of the campus and the girls' privy on the opposite
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side and you can bet there was this unmarked line between the privies
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that had absolute respect from both males and females. After passing
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through this line everyone got down to serious business on the play
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ground. The girls would do the Ring Around The Roses, Drop The
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Handkerchief, worked in their play houses and it seemed like they
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always had something to giggle about, especially if they were around
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any of the boys. The boys would be doing Red Rover-Red Rover Let Come
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Over, Pop The Whip and Soft Ball and pitching washers.
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Then there was a group of boys who always played marbles. I received
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most of my early education involved in a game of marbles. There were
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different types of games of marbles, one where holes were dug so far
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apart and you would shoot 'to make the hole.' Then there was the
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game where a circle was drawn on the ground. The diameter of the
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circle varied with each game and was determined by who was playing
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and how good they were. In the center of the circle each player would
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place a marble on a line and then the players would 'shoot from the
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ring' to see if they could knock a marble from the circle. If they did
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the marble was theirs to 'keep'. Now this word 'keep' brought on more
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talk from Mother and Daddy. I was told not to play KEEPS, for this
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was thought of as gambling and I should not be a part of it. I always
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minded my mother and Daddy, almost.
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This game of marbles in the ring became an obsession with me and I
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soon got to be about the best marble player at school. I was
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accumulating several marbles and had to keep them hid or suffer the
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limb juice. Sugar was packaged in five pound cloth bags at that time
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and these bags became the vault for my marble collection. The marble
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used to 'shoot' with was known as one's agie or toy. When playing,
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one could shoot as long as their toy stayed in the ring. The toy
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would become a very valuable marble when everyone knew its
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capabilities and could be traded for maybe five to ten marbles from
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another player.
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I was always having to explain why knuckles were raw and of course
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I always answered, 'playing marbles'. The next question was, "You are
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not playing KEEPS are you?" I somehow always tried to answer this
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question while walking away or sticking my head out the door with the
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best mumble I could come up with.
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Playing marbles was my game all during WWII and I had several of the
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five pound sugar sacks of marbles when we returned to Holly Springs.
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It was very obvious to my mother and daddy that I was playing KEEPS
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and I was told just about every day not to play. I do not ever recall
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my mother or Daddy looking straight at me and asking the question
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which would have stopped me from filling the sacks. I would not have
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dared to deliberately not tell the truth. I know now, without doubt,
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that they knew what I was doing, but would not ask the question.
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The summer of 1940 brought on several church revivals and everyone
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attended each denomination's church. This was just the way neighbors
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did. Ice cream suppers, water melon cutt'ens and always the swimming
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hole on Sunday evening. I always had to wade in the shallow water
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with the rest of the little kids but I knew that one day I would jump
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off the high bank with the big boys, and I did.
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I remember hearing about the war with Germany. I really didn't
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know what was happening but I knew it was something bad because each
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time we went to Cedar Bluff to listen to the radio, we always heard
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about what the Germans were doing. During the summer there were many
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volley ball games at Cedar Bluff, some at night. There were two
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gasoline lanterns in the community and one was hung on each side of
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the net for light. Night volley ball playing seemed to bring
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more people out to the school. After the games everyone would listen
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to the news before going home and it was also announced who was sick,
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and who needed help of whatever kind it might be.
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Sepetember 1940 finally arrived and I officially started school. I
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bet I grew a foot overnight! I did not remain in the first grade
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but a few days and somehow I got promoted to the second grade.
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Getting promoted to the second grade at Cedar Bluff required me to
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move over one row in the class room.
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I think it must have been about October that it was decided that
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we would leave Cedar Bluff and go to California where people could get
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jobs in defense plants. All of our furniture, what there was of it,
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and personal items which could not be put in a 1935 Chevrolet Coupe,
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were left with my Grandmother Kerr. My mother had relatives in Vera
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Vest, Texas, and this was our first stop on our way to California.
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My mother's relatives and her husband persuaded Mother and Daddy
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not to go to California, for things were looking pretty bad with the
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war with Germany and California may not be the best place to be.
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I was enrolled in school for two weeks and then we returned to Kilgore,
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Texas, where my daddy attended a machinist school and I enrolled in
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the second grade. Daddy finished his school and went to Galveston
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to work at Todd Shipyards. On December 2, 1941 there were about six
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inches of snow on the ground at Kilgore, Texas. I had the measles
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and was eight years old. Five days later Japan bombed Pearl Harbor
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and I, like the rest of you, saw the world change.
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During World War II we lived in Galveston, Texas until a hurricane
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almost destroyed the town and then we moved to Orange, Texas for the
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duration of the war.
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My mother and daddy had purchased some property at Holly Springs in
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1941, or let me say they had paid fifty dollars down on thirty acres
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of property which was bought for thirty dollars an acre with a note to
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be paid at one hundred dollars a year. They paid for the property in
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two years. Two years later a few more acres were added and after the
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war, they returned to build their home here and this is where I live now,
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only my home sits just about fifty feet from one of the flowing
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springs.
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The Cedar Bluff School property went to the county when school
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was not held there after the early 1940's. The county then decided
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in 1990 to give the school and three acres of land back to the Cedar Bluff
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community to be used as a community center. There was an immediate
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response from the community and ex-students to restore the building to
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its original condition. The re-levelling of the building was a very
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simple chore; in fact no work was done on this at all, since the
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building was only one fourth of an inch off level from end to end. To
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me, this means my grandfather set the pillars with the exact time of
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the moon so there would be no sinking into the ground.
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A bell has been hung in the belfry, floors refinished and of course
|
|||
|
a new coat of paint. I have my grandfather's level, plumb bob, line
|
|||
|
string and chalk which I am sure was used to construct the school.
|
|||
|
I also have found journals he kept of material purchased in 1911
|
|||
|
which is almost certain to have been for the school. Work is underway
|
|||
|
for a place for these and other items so future generations can learn
|
|||
|
the history of Cedar Bluff School and its graduates and the people who
|
|||
|
lived in the community.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Holly Springs being only about five miles from Cedar Bluff gives
|
|||
|
me an opportunity to live in two country communities, with Holly
|
|||
|
Springs at one time being a school site like Cedar Bluff. In 1950 my
|
|||
|
mother got a building program started for Holly Springs and a
|
|||
|
Community Center stands there now on the ground where Holly Springs
|
|||
|
School once stood.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have a lot of love for both communities, having lived here
|
|||
|
since 1944, still have my close neighbors at Cedar Bluff with a home
|
|||
|
coming the third Saturday each October, a home coming at Holly
|
|||
|
Springs the third Saturday in May and a community BBQ the fourth of
|
|||
|
July. This has been a wonderful community to live in and the people
|
|||
|
are what has made it that way. The people are the same at Cedar Bluff
|
|||
|
and Holly Springs as they were in 1939 when they so willingly came to
|
|||
|
the needs of my family.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Beside my desk is a picture of my grandson pulling the rope to
|
|||
|
ring the bell at the Cedar Bluff School. I hope his life can be
|
|||
|
surrounded by people who will care for him as the people of Cedar
|
|||
|
Bluff did for me.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=========================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MORRIS ON!
|
|||
|
by Eddie Dunmore
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Sharp and his family spent that Christmas (1899) with his
|
|||
|
wife's mother, who was then living at Sandfield Cottage, Headington,
|
|||
|
about a mile east of Oxford. On Boxing Day, as he was looking out of
|
|||
|
the window, upon the snow-covered drive, a strange procession
|
|||
|
appeared: eight men dressed in white, decorated with ribbons, with
|
|||
|
pads of small latten-bells strapped to their shins, carrying coloured
|
|||
|
sticks and white handkerchiefs; accompanying them was a
|
|||
|
concertina-player and a man dressed as a `Fool'.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Six of the men formed up in front of the house in two lines of three;
|
|||
|
the concertina-player struck up an invigorating tune, the like of
|
|||
|
which Sharp had never heard before; the men jumped high into the air,
|
|||
|
then danced with springs and capers, waving and swinging the
|
|||
|
handkerchiefs which they held, one in each hand, while the bells
|
|||
|
marked the rhythm of the step...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Sharp watched and listened spellbound. He felt that a new world of
|
|||
|
beauty had been revealed to him... He plied the men eagerly with
|
|||
|
questions. They apologised for being out at Christmas; they knew that
|
|||
|
Whitsun was the proper time, but work was slack and they thought
|
|||
|
there would be no harm in earning an honest penny. The
|
|||
|
concertina-player was Mr. William Kimber, junior, a young man of
|
|||
|
twenty-seven, whose fame as a dancer has now spread all over England.
|
|||
|
Sharp noted the five tunes from him next day, and later on many more."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This passage is taken from A.H. Fox-Strangways' 1933 biography of
|
|||
|
Cecil James Sharp and records Sharp's first sight of morris dancing
|
|||
|
on that Boxing Day (whose Centenary is now close). Despite studying
|
|||
|
mathematics at Cambridge, Sharp was a professional musician who had
|
|||
|
become engrossed in the collection of folk-songs and music from the
|
|||
|
agricultural working-class of his day. He had been an assistant
|
|||
|
organist and music teacher in Australia: by 1896 he was Principal of
|
|||
|
the Hampstead Conservatoire of Music.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In any account of morris-dancing (or of the folk-song revival) Sharp
|
|||
|
is the single most important figure, even though subsequent reflection
|
|||
|
and research has shown his judgement to be occasionally idiosyncratic.
|
|||
|
He was a product of his age and class and came to recording these
|
|||
|
examples of working-class culture with all his prejudices and
|
|||
|
assumptions intact. He shared, for instance, the view that what he
|
|||
|
was collecting was the dim recollection of some `Golden Age' and that
|
|||
|
its carriers could not possibly understand the beauty of what they
|
|||
|
were performing. Sharp also postulated a connection with `pagan' roots.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Arising out of his experience at Headington, Sharp was central to
|
|||
|
the reinvigoration of the English Folk Song Society (founded 1898)
|
|||
|
and foundation of the English Folk Dance Society (1911). The latter
|
|||
|
trained teachers and promoted the teaching of English Folk dances
|
|||
|
in schools.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Because of Sharp's obsession, there are now more morris teams than
|
|||
|
ever before (both in the UK only and certainly world-wide). He
|
|||
|
established a `headquarters' team who danced illustrations to his
|
|||
|
lectures, having passed the necessary examinations to gain
|
|||
|
certificates in morris dancing. Slowly, new teams began forming, as
|
|||
|
it were `taking the morris back to the people'. By 1934, the members
|
|||
|
of these original teams had dispersed and founded second-generation
|
|||
|
teams and the need for dialogue within the movement became pressing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One of the early clubs, Cambridge MM, decided that something had to
|
|||
|
be done. The Squire (leader) at the time was an academic, Joseph
|
|||
|
Needham (now over 90 and a pre-eminent Sinologist) convened a meeting
|
|||
|
at which the Morris Ring came into being in 1934. This, the oldest of
|
|||
|
the three organisations in England, maintains its exclusively male
|
|||
|
character, although some sides have been noticed with female
|
|||
|
musicians. The two other organisations, currently are the Morris
|
|||
|
Federation (originally the Women's Morris Federation) and The Open
|
|||
|
Morris.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My current assumption, based on the work of researchers such as
|
|||
|
Heaney, Chandler, Dommett and Hutton, is to accept the view that
|
|||
|
morris-dancing became a popular entertainment in England at some
|
|||
|
point in the 15th Century. After the upheavals of the Wars of the
|
|||
|
Roses, which culminated in the establishment of the Tudor regime,
|
|||
|
there was a considered attempt to establish a strong central
|
|||
|
authority. One avenue was the downgrading of Roman Catholic Saints'
|
|||
|
Days (cf. the current quarrelling over our membership of the EC) and
|
|||
|
the introduction of purely local festivals celebrated with
|
|||
|
expressions of local pride. Part of this was the employment of Town
|
|||
|
Waits and the establishment of troupes of dancers. These troupes
|
|||
|
would tend to perform dances that were currently fashionable -
|
|||
|
`morris' dances were the most popular at Court and therefore entered
|
|||
|
the common repertory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One piece of evidence that I like to think lends support to this
|
|||
|
modified view comes from the introduced custom of declaring the
|
|||
|
anniversary of the current sovereign's accession date a public
|
|||
|
holiday, when the town bands would turn out with all the other
|
|||
|
expressions of local identity in a grand parade. There would be
|
|||
|
giants, mythical animals (including dragons shooting real flames!)
|
|||
|
and - morris dancers. Charles II formally entered London on May 29th
|
|||
|
1660, and this day was proclaimed a public holiday by the Convention
|
|||
|
Parliament. We still dance `The 29th of May'.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nowadays, we tend to gather a variety of disparate dances under the
|
|||
|
general term `morris'. You will find dances collected in the Cotswolds
|
|||
|
(Oxfordshire mainly, although Gloucestershire, Northamptonshire and
|
|||
|
Worcestershire have also contributed several) which correspond to the
|
|||
|
narrow view. The majority of dance teams wear white shirts and
|
|||
|
trousers, although britches are currently fashionable, and the team's
|
|||
|
identity will be recognised from the baldrick and ribbon colours. A
|
|||
|
dance will normally be performed by six dancers to the accompaniment
|
|||
|
of a melodeon, accordion, or fiddle (traditional-minded musicians
|
|||
|
will play a whittle and dub - a three-hole flageolet in the right
|
|||
|
hand while beating a small drum with the left hand). Just below the
|
|||
|
knees you will notice bell-pads: a flat piece of leather shaped like
|
|||
|
a waffle iron with four columns of four latten-bells covered with
|
|||
|
ribbons.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sword dances by teams of five, six or eight are part of the current
|
|||
|
morris family. The five-dancer set dances a variant known as `rapper',
|
|||
|
in which the swords are flexible and occasionally are bent almost
|
|||
|
double. A spectacular ingredient of this variety is the single or
|
|||
|
double somersault over the swords by one or two members of the team.
|
|||
|
The tempo is fast and staccato. Longsword is slightly slower (not
|
|||
|
much) and the swords are stiffer. All three dances culminate in the
|
|||
|
formation of a `nut': this is an interweaving, resulting in the
|
|||
|
construction of a pentagram, hexagram or octagram (I have seen my
|
|||
|
favourite rapper side, from Monkseaton, bring the Bessy and Fool into
|
|||
|
the set and finish with a heptagram).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Border morris comes from the Welsh Marches and is danced in ordinary
|
|||
|
clothes decorated with ribbons. Traditionally the performers faces
|
|||
|
are blacked (the subject of some controversy: it may originate from
|
|||
|
the vogue for black-face minstrels in the 2nd quarter of the
|
|||
|
nineteenth Century). The dances are vigorous and, for authenticity,
|
|||
|
tend to be danced in boots. Molly dancing comes from East Anglia and
|
|||
|
has similarities to Border morris, including blacking-up, although it
|
|||
|
sometimes seems to be a male-only version of a contra-dance. Although
|
|||
|
not strictly in this category a team from Bacup, the Britannia
|
|||
|
Coconut Dancers, wear black shirts and britches with white stockings.
|
|||
|
They also wear a white French `Liberty'-style cap and a white short
|
|||
|
skirt with three flounces. Tied just above their knees are
|
|||
|
half-coconuts, with the other half held in their palms. I was lucky
|
|||
|
enough to take part in a show at the Albert Hall in the early 70s at
|
|||
|
which Bacup also appeared - a particularly fond memory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My personal involvement has been as a dancer and musician since the
|
|||
|
late 60s and, for the last 10 years, as the Editor of `The Morris
|
|||
|
Dancer' which tries to be a semi-learned journal in the field. For
|
|||
|
the last four years I have also edited the `Circular' which is a
|
|||
|
record of the current scene, primarily in England although I have
|
|||
|
received contributions from continental Europe, the United States,
|
|||
|
the Arabian Gulf and Australasia. Should any reader want more
|
|||
|
details, e-mail me at edunmore@cix.compulink.co.uk and I will attempt
|
|||
|
to give you a contact address in your part of the world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
==================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CINQUAIN MADNESS
|
|||
|
by the editors
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As an extra bonus in this issue of The Review, your editors,
|
|||
|
inspired by Jim Olson's article, were moved to try their hand at this
|
|||
|
poetic form, which, as we discovered, proved to be more difficult
|
|||
|
than it looks. Promise not to laugh, but here are the results.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GALAH
|
|||
|
Grey, pink,
|
|||
|
With high-pitched screech,
|
|||
|
Flocks gathered on blossom,
|
|||
|
Harsh grating call of quick warning:
|
|||
|
Watch out !
|
|||
|
--Elaine Dabbs
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HERON
|
|||
|
Heron,
|
|||
|
By our fishpool,
|
|||
|
Vigilant, immobile;
|
|||
|
A quick lunge, a streak of gold, then
|
|||
|
He's gone!
|
|||
|
--Pat Davidson
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LATE MARCH SNOWSTORM
|
|||
|
Winter,
|
|||
|
surly old fool,
|
|||
|
pethetic lingerer,
|
|||
|
have you not seen the calendar?
|
|||
|
Be gone!
|
|||
|
--Jim Hursey
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=========================================================================
|
|||
|
end cybersenior.2.2
|
|||
|
|