====== Serendipity ====== **...and other interesting COUNTRY DANCES**\\ **OLD & NEW ...with MUSIC ...in a VARIETY of**\\ **styles and formations**\\ (1) Monday LONE 8 (2) Tuesday Duple Minor (3) Wednesday Circle (4) Thursday Mixer (5) Friday Sicilian (6) Saturday Triad (7) Sunday Special (8) an Amhurst Cocktail (9) At Rainbow’s End (10) Birds of a Feather (11) the Bishop's Halloween (12) Black-eyed Susan (13) Bridges of New York (14) the Bright Side (15) Britain's SUCCESS (16) the Circle Sarabande (17) Clusterphobia (18) Cold Weather Waltz (19) Coronation DAY (20) Crown the Year (21) to Dance or Not to Dance (22) Diamond Hall (23) the English Poacher (24) Enjoyment (25) the Eye of the the Storm (26) February Flower (27) Got a Dance—By George! (28) the Green HOUSE (29) Grief Alamode (30) Harvest Round (31) Highfield (32) Hill House (33) Icing on the Cake (34) In the Sere (35) the Ins and Outs (36) the Invisible Woman (37) Joy After Sorrow (38) the Kidlington Knight (39) Lady Jane (40) Lichfield Sundays (41) Love Thy Neighbor (42) Manage the Miser (43) a Mark of Distinction (44) Midsummer (45) Mr. Willetts’ Wish (46) the Mud Dauber (47) Music Is the Food of Love (48) New Man Tiger (49) the Night Visitors (50) Norbury Park (51) NOStalgia (52) Ode to the Pianist (53) the OId City Triads (54) the Ponderosa Pine (55) Princess’s CoUTrt (56) Return to Halsway (57) Robin a Bobbin (58) Roses Among the Thorns (59) Royal Fishery (60) Satisfaction (61) Serendipity (62) Songs of the Harpist (63) Soulton Jig (64) a Subtil Knittinge (65) Summer Circle (66) Sunny Meadows (67) Terry's Triad (68) These Golden Times (69) Thirty Years’ Waltz (70) 3-D Waltz (71) Three Men in a Boat (72) Time for a Little Something (73) Tracks in the SNOW (74) TranSported (75) the Treasure (76) 24 Carats Fine (77) A Very Shadow (78) Village Inn 4-SOME (79) Wassail Wassail! (80) Wendell’s WED (81) Winter Wallz (82) Wonders Are Many (83) you'll Get There from Here (84) Y2K Why Serendipity?\\ “Horace Walpole (1717-1797) coined the word ‘serendipity,’ giving one word for ‘the gift of finding valuable or agreeable things not sought for.’ The name comes from the fairy tale The Three Princes of Serendip. These three young men from Serendip (or Ceylon) traveled and discovered things that they were not looking for but that turned out to be of value to them. A version of this 5 century AD story was published in 1557 in Italian. In 1721, a French version was printed in Amsterdam, and in 1722 an English version was printed in London.” --Al Herman