Annotation:Lady Susan Montgomery's Hornpipe
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LADY SUSAN MONTGOMERY'S HORNPIPE. English, Scottish; Triple Hornpipe (3/2 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune belongs to a fairly large family of Anglo-Scots triple-hornpipe tunes that includes such titles as "Punchinello (1)," "Punchanello's Hornpipe," "Three Rusty Swords," "Flat Cap," "Christmas is Coming," "Three Sharp Knives" and others. See also David Young's "Lady Christian Montgomery's Hornpipe," another 3/2 hornpipe that is adjacent to "Lady Susan Mongomery's Hornpipe" in his manuscript. Lady Susan and Lady Christian were sisters, two of eight daughters (and three sons) of the beautiful and accomplished Susanna Montgomery, Countess of Eglinton (1690-1780), third wife of Alexander Montgomerie, 9th Earl of Eglinton. Poet and writer Thomas D'Urfey dedicated his pastoral comedy The Gentle Shepherd (1725) to Susanna and presented her with the original manuscript. It was said that when she and her daughters were in Edinburgh the caddies at the Cross were dumbfounded by their beauty as they stepped from their Sedan chairs. Lady Susan (sometimes called Susanna), the third daughter, married John Renton of Lamberton. Lady Susanna, married to John Renton of Lamberton in the summer of 1739, had two daughters, and died at Blackadder 27th July 1754. She was the grandmother of Scottish antiquary and artist Charles Kirkpatrick-Sharpe (1781?–1851) (see "C. K. Sharpe Esq. Favourite").
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: David Young (Drummond Castle/Duke of Perth Manuscript), 1734; No. 17.
Recorded sources: