I’m not sure if our American friends will realise it, but the name is a pun
on the “Vickers Machine Gun”, one of the main weapons used by the British
Army in the First World War
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vickers_machine_gun).

 

Jeremy

 

 

From: Callers [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Edmund Croft via Callers
Sent: 17 August 2015 22:58
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Callers] Misplaced a dance...

 

Valerie Young is looking for a dance featuring ladies' chains all over the
place, then circles and pass thrus to get your partner back. As she came
across it in the USA, it's unlikely to be the one I know, which is by ex-
Cambridge (UK) dancer/choreographer Jacob Steel, unless someone exported it,
having danced it at the Inter-Varsity Folk Dance Festival.

 

The story Jacob uses for this one is that clergy are not permitted to use
certain sorts of weapon, so this particular gun fires ladies rather than
bullets:

 

THE VICAR’S MACHINE GUN (R32) Becket   Jacob Steel
1-8       Circle left ¾ and pass through up and down
            Circle left ½ and the men roll their neighbour across to change
places
9-16     Ladies chain on the right diagonal. LCh across
17-24   LCh on the left diagonal. Ladies pass RSh into half a reel of 4
across
25-32   Balance and swing partner.

 

Edmund Croft,

Cambridge Folk of various sorts

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