<p>After a beribboned cock has been presented to the Mayor of certain Walloon towns the hapless bird is decapitated and the people dance around it - a strange ritual ceremony its analogue known also in the Pyrenees and in Spain.&nbsp;This and many another ancient custom has been kept alive throughout southern and eastern Belgium by the people's great love of dancing - on the place on platforms and in cafes.&nbsp;In Flanders too traditional dancing lives on.&nbsp;Her link with the past is seen in particular with the Sword Dances for which she was so famous.&nbsp;History records their performance in the picturesque city of Bruges as far back as 1389 and in the region of Antwerp men still dance 'The Traweiteldans' to the accompaniment of a drum roll.</p><p><br></p><p>M. Pinon was a folk song expert but was led to study folk dancing through insistent demands from all parts of the country. M. Jamar boasted twenty-five years' study of his native Flanders.&nbsp;Like his collaborator he was a member of the Belgian National Commission on Folklore.</p><p><br></p><p>Their book contains music and step notations for five dances and there are in addition four coloured plates showing the correct costumes to be worn.</p><p><br></p>