As far as I am aware, the world's leading experts on the quadrille are
Chris and Ellis Rogers (see
http://quadrilles.co.uk/about-us/).
Other extremely knowledgeable people are Susan de Guardiola
(
http://www.kickery.com/ & Richard Powers (
http://richardpowers.com/).
What others are saying may be correct but if you want to know what is
correct then any of the links above will take you to people who are
experts in this.
Michael Barraclough
www.michaelbarraclough.com
On Tue, 2017-02-28 at 03:19 +0000, djeh_b(a)yahoo.com [trad-dance-
callers] wrote:
It might be helpful to look at all of the ways Howe
used the word
"chassee" in his dance manual. This edition actually spells it
"chassa" but the word appears at least 40 times:
https://books.google
.com/books?id=XkJKAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=elias+howe&hl=en&sa
=X&ved=0ahUKEwjyq-
DG5rHSAhVE4YMKHViFDiwQ6AEIHDAA#v=onepage&q=chassa&f=false
A variety of words follow it: "chassa round to the left," "chassa
across," "chassa de chassa,"chassa croissez," "chassa out,"
etc. To
me, that would indicate that, as now, "chassa" is simply the footwork
of a sliding step, with the direction of that step following. I did
find at least one example of "chassa across partner," which makes me
think that a simple "chassa across" would be across the set.
I did find this description: "All Chassa: Each couple facing their
own partner and chassa across each other four steps the gentlemen
passing to the outside of the ladies and back the same finishing with
a bow and courtesy The gentleman then offers his hand or arm to his
lady and conducts her to her seat which is the proper termination to
every set of Quadrilles (8 bars)"
The "facing each other" would also seem to indicate that the couples
are crossing the set with their partners and not crossing their own
partner.
Deborah Hyland
St. Louis