• Gog Magog Molly – The Menace of the Fens

    Gog Magog Molly – that’s what this dance troupe call themselves.

    And The Menace of the Fens is how they describe themselves. Their dancing surely must (must?) have something in its history and genesis that is in common with Morris Dancing.

    There is a comment on the page of their website that details the dances that states, “Traditional molly dancing was nowhere near this well documented, or danced with this much precision.” So Molly dancing must have a history rather than it being something dreamed up by the troupe.

    A quick google for Molly dancing brought up a Wikipedia page that states:

    Molly dancing is a form of English Morris dance, traditionally done by out-of-work ploughboys in midwinter in the 19th century.

    I don’t know what the origin of the coloured faces of this troupe is, but surely it is an extension of blacking their faces to conceal their identities.

    Because Wikipedia also states that

    Molly dancing is most associated with Plough Monday, the first Monday after Epiphany. Tradition has it that as a way of filling the gap between Christmas and the start of the spring ploughing season, the ploughboys would tour around the village landowners, offering to dance for money. Those who refused would be penalised in various ways (see Trick or treat) including having a furrow ploughed across the offender’s lawn.

    The dancers, wishing to gain employment from those same landowners shortly afterwards, would attempt to conceal their identities by blacking their faces with soot and dressing up in a modified version of their Sunday best, typically black garments adorned with coloured scarves and other fripperies. It was originally an all-male tradition but with one of the members—the Molly—dressed up as a woman.

  • In The Museum

    Testing how wide this theme (McKinley) will display images. The answer is – not as wide as the previous theme I was using (Dalston), but I like the overall look of this theme better.

    Update 12 December 2019

    Changed to the TwentyTwenty theme and I now understand that some themes are built to take full advantage of the Gutenberg image sizing, while other themes are not. People new to WordPress might not realise this; I didn’t until I had played about with the other theme, and I have been using WP for years.

  • Lost In Thought

    Man with green face lost in thought

    Strange that when I changed the theme just now and posted this with only the photo, it (the photo) doesn’t show up except in the single post.

    Let’s see whether adding text kicks it into showing the photo.

    No, still not.

    OK – changed the theme again. All OK now.

    Aha, I think it is a problem with WordPress not syncing or clearing the cache or something, and probably not a theme problem at all. I say that because when I look in another browser, the text ends with ‘No, still not.’ and doesn’t pick up the next short paragraph. Will it pick up this paragraph now?