Annotation:Kitty Fisher
X:1 T:Kitty Fisher M:2/4 L:1/8 S:Thompson - Twenty-Four Country Dances for 1760 K:G G/A/B/c/ dB|Gg g2|G/A/B/c/ dB|FA A2| G/A/B/c/ dB|Ggge|fde^c|d2 D2:| |:d/e/f/g/ a=c|Bg g2|G/A/B/c/ dG|FA A2| G/A/B/c/ dG|Ggge|dBcA|G2G2:|
...the illustrious Kitty Fisher, who was just beginning to be fashionable. She was magnificently dressed, and it is no exaggeration to say that she had on diamonds worth five hundred thousand francs. Goudar told me that if I liked I might have her then and there for ten guineas. I did not care to do so, however, for, though charming, she could only speak English, and I liked to have all my senses, including that of hearing, gratified. When she had gone, Mrs. Wells told us that Kitty had eaten a bank-note for a thousand guineas, on a slice of bread and butter, that very day. The note was a present from Sir Akins, brother of the fair Mrs. Pitt. I do not know whether the bank thanked Kitty for the present she had made it. .... [London and Moscow: The English, Jacques Casanova de Seingalt]
A year before her death she married John Norris son of the M.P. for Rye, and, in the short time before her death she became known for her charity to the locals around Hemsted, her husband's family seat. Her untimely demise was said to have been the result of poisoning by lead-based cosmetics (as was Maria Gunning - see note for "Miss Gunning's Fancy Reel"), although some attribute it to smallpox. Kitty's portrait was painted by a number of accomplished period painters, including Joshua Reynolds ("Kitty Fisher" c. 1763-64), Nathaniel Hone, Philip Mercer and James Northcote. Kitty was also mentioned in the nursery rhyme:
Lucy Locket lost a pocket,
Kitty Fisher found it;
But ne'er a penny was there in't,
Except the binding round it.
The first strain of "Kitty Fisher" is similar to the first strain of shoemaker and fiddler William Winter's "Blooming Hedges," save that the latter is set in triple time. See note for "Yankee Doodle" for more on this tune.