Citation - Pennsylvania Packet-Philadelphia: 1771.11.11

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Index Entry Ball, metaphor of life, in lyric [beg] May I presume, in humble lays 
Location New London 
Citation
PP-P.771.010
11 Nov 1771:11 (3)
VERSES ON DANCING.
Addressed to a Young Lady.
May I presume, in humble lays, 
My dancing fair! thy steps to praise?
While this grand maxim I advance, 
That all the world is but a dance.
That human kind, both man and woman, 
Do dance, is evident and common:
David himself, that Godlike King, 
We know, could dance as well as sing:
Folks who at court would keep their ground, 
Must dance attendance the year round;
Whole nations dance: gay striking France
Has led Great Britain many a dance;
And some still think that France and Spain
Intend to make us dance again.
All nature is one ball we find:
The water dances to the wind;
The sea itself, at night and noon, 
Rises and dances to the moon.
The moon around the earth does tread, 
A Cheshire round, yet ne'er looks red;
The earth and planets round the sun
Still dance, nor will their dance be done, 
Till nature in one blast be blended, 
Then may we say the ball is ended.


Generic Title Pennsylvania Packet-Philadelphia 
Date 1771.11.11 
Publisher Dunlap, John 
City, State Philadelphia, PA 
Year 1771 
Bibliography B0039984
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