Annotation:Cuttymun and Treeladle
X:1 T:Cuttymun and Treeladle M:C L:1/8 N:”Tis is the tune mentioned in the old Poem N:entitled Christ’s Kirk on the Green. Canto 2nd line 96.” S:John Rook music manuscript collection (Waverton, Cumbria, 1840, p. 192) Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:A {c}e2 ea e2cA|{c}e2 e=g d2 BG|{c}e2 ea ceae|=gbeg d2 BG|| e2 cA eAcA|e2cA d=GBG|e2 cA eAcA|=gbeg d2 BG| e2 cA eAcA|e2 cA d=GBG|e2 cA ceae|=gbeg d2 BG|]
CUTTYMUN/CUTTYMAN AND TRE(E)LADLE. AKA and see "Bedding of the Bride (The)." Scottish, Reel. A Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Surenne): AAB (Athole, Gow, Kerr): AABB (Honeyman). Gow gives in Part Second of the Complete Repository of Original Scots Tunes (c. 1802, 1810-1820) that "This is the tune mentioned in the old Poem entitled Christ's Kirk on the Green, Canto 2nd, line 96." The antiquarian William Stenhouse, writing in Illustrations of the lyric poetry and music of Scotland (p. 491) adds that the mention of the tune was by poet Allan Ramsay, in the canto he added to the 'ancient poem' of "Christ's Kirk on the Green."
John Mactaggart's Scottish Gallovidian Encyclopedia (1824), gives:
MUNN--An old person with a very little face; see 'Cuttymun', and, since writing that article, 'Cuttymuns and three Laddles', have come into my head; so this phrase may seem to say, that 'Cuttymun' is a short-shaked spoon.
Antiquarian William Stenhouse was the first to note the resemblance of the reel "Tail Toddle" to "Cuttymun and Treeladle."