Source: Playford (1651), TPB.
Setting: A longways set of three couples.
Version: 1.0
1- 8Forward and back a double, and again.1- 2First man changes with second woman, passing right shouldersand going back to back,3- 4first man changes with third man,5- 8Take hands with person across from you, all forward and back a double.1- 4First woman changes with second man, and then third woman,5- 8Forward and back a double.1-16Repeat changes and forward/back from new positions; note thatthroughout this sequence, half of the time you will be dancingwith someone of the same gender.1-16Repeat changes a third time from new positions, ending up whereyou started the dance1- 8Siding.1- 4Couple 3 crosses and skips once around the entire set, whileCouple 1 sashays down to 2nd position, whileCouple 2 steps back and up to 1st position, then5- 8Couple 2 sashays back to place, whileCouple 1 steps back and up to place.1- 8Repeat with Couple 1 going `around the world' and couples2 and 3 changing places, starting with Couple 2 sashaying down.1- 8Arming.1-24Men sheepskin hey.1-24Women sheepskin hey.
Transcription (Picking of Sticks):
Leade up all a D. Forwards and back ?u?.? That again ?u?:? First man changes with the 2. Wo. then with the last man ?u?.:? Leade up as before, then the Wo. change as the man did, every Cu. doing thus.
Sides all ?u?.? That again ?u?:? The first Cu. slip down betweene the 2. they slipping up, then th 2. slip downe, and the first slip up ?u?.:? All this again the last Cu. crossing over below, go up and cross above, fall to your places ?u?.:? ?u?:? Then the foure last slip, and the first Cu. cross about ?u?.:? ?u?:?
Armes all ?u?.? That again ?u?:? The We. stand still, men going the Hey between them, the last man going about the middle Wo. doe thus three times over, then goe quite round about all the We. to your places ?u?.:? ?u?.:? The We. doe as much.
Discussion:
Yes, that's 17 repetitions of the music --- guaranteed to annoy musicians who count instead of watching the dancers.
Men's sheepskin hey: first man leads men to begin winding down around the women. When they reach the bottom, they loop around to wind up around the women. However, the last man always takes a shortcut around the second woman to become the leading man. After 3 repetitions the first man is again in front, and leads the men out the top, around the far side of the women, and back to place.
This dance is sometimes done to the music of Lavena, which is a dance also found in Playford, but this is a Cecil Sharp substitution. The song ``Kitty Magee'' is even more modern, according to The Playford Ball.