Bung Your Eye

 BUNG YOUR EYE. AKA and see "Bang Your Eye," "Brisk Young Lad('s)s," "High Cauld Cap," "The Jolly Old Man," "Mary the Maid." Scottish, Jig. A Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB (Sharp): AABB (Gow, Karpeles, Kennedy, Williamson). This melody was published in the "Bodleian MS" (1740) {named for the library in which it resides--the Bodleian Library, Oxford} and is inscribed A Collection of the Newest Country Dances Performed in Scotland written at Edinburgh by D.A. Young, W.M. 1740. Originally set by Young as a country dance (to which he gives directions). Another early country dance version appears in John Johnson's Choice Collection of 200 Favourite Country Dances, vol. III (London, 1744, as "Bung Her Eye"). Karpeles notes that this tune is also suitable as an accompaniment to Rapper Sword Dance. Glen (1891) reported he found the tune earliest in print in Robert Ross's 1780 collection (pg. 1), and evidently did not know of the Bodleian MS. Samuel Bayard (1981) believes the piece to be a "recognizable version" of a tune family that includes "Lan(n)igan's Ball," "Lumps of Pudding," "Kitty Alone," "Muirland Willie," and "O As I Was Kiss'd Yestreen [1]." Close variants of the "Bung Your Eye" strain of the family are: "Off to the Hunt", "The Antrim Lasses," "Tatter Jack," "The Boys of Carrigallen," "Mount Your Baggage [1]," and "Bonnie Strathmore." The term 'bung your eye' means to 'shut your eye', a meaning taken from the bung or cork used to stopper a hole in a cask, for example. 'Bung your eye' was one euphemism for gin (along with 'strip-me-naked' and others), an alcoholic beverage the English populace nearly drowned in during the mid-18th century. In this sense an excess of gin will 'shut (bung) your eye(s)' through blind drunkenness. Another sense of the term is revealed in the song "The Bold Irishman," an early 19th century broadside sheet ballad that relates the perils of an immigrant in a new land. Here the phrase 'bung your eye' implies a threat to beat the protagonist until his eyes are shut: A blustering bully with a head like a Turk Says welcome from Ireland, sweet Paddy from Cork Arrah turn you round Pat, for I've been a kin For I never yet see a coat buttoned behind A beef headed butcher was then standing by Cries Paddy you rogue I'll bung up your eye Such blustering words made my heart ache For fear of my eyes not a word dare I speak Paddy prevails in the end, turning the tables on the two bullies: The bully that said he'd bung up my eye, I tipt him a grinder as I passed by, I let him to know as he lay in his gore, That an Irishmans coat was buttoned before See also note to "Lanigan's Ball" and O'Neill's "The Jolly Old Man." Printed sources: Aird (Selection of Scotch, English, Irish and Foreign Airs), vol. 1, 1782; No. 15, p. 6. Gow (Complete Repository), Part 1, 1799; p. 21. Johnson (A Further Collection of Dances, Marches, Minuetts and Duetts of the Latter 18th Century), 1998; p. 13. Karpeles & Schofield (A Selection of 100 English Folk Dance Airs), 1951; p. 26. Kennedy (Fiddler's Tune Book), vol. 2, 1954; p. 42 (appears as "Mary the Maid"). Sharp (Country Dance Tunes), 1909; p. 58. Williamson (English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish Fiddle Tunes), 1976, p. 50.

X:1 T:Bung your Eye M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Jig S:Gow - 1st Repository (1799) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:Amin E|ABA c2d|e(dc) B2A|GAG B2c|dge dBG|ABA c2d| edc Bcd|e2A AB^G|A3 e2::B|c>de/f/ g2a|gec gec| G>AB/c/ d2e|dge dBG|c>de/f/ g2a|gec de^g|a2A AB^G|A3 e2:||

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