MastersingersE. Grant Richards, 1906 - 216 Seiten |
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Seite 6
... fall on the ear . Spring is practising his stiff fingers as he blows a few trial notes into his mellow reed ; and gradually the disused joints are loosened and the notes form themselves into a melody . Birds and insects , flowers and ...
... fall on the ear . Spring is practising his stiff fingers as he blows a few trial notes into his mellow reed ; and gradually the disused joints are loosened and the notes form themselves into a melody . Birds and insects , flowers and ...
Seite 9
... falls on our outward ear , but its language is alien ; we should need the wisdom of children to understand it . But the crystal cleanness of it at least we can understand , and long for something of its happy innocence and full life ...
... falls on our outward ear , but its language is alien ; we should need the wisdom of children to understand it . But the crystal cleanness of it at least we can understand , and long for something of its happy innocence and full life ...
Seite 10
... fall on his ear his soul dies in him . The rude glee of the yokels jars him to the quick ; why are they here , making their infernal din , blots on God's landscape ? The loud bassoon sings no jubilee for him , and the tart , squalling ...
... fall on his ear his soul dies in him . The rude glee of the yokels jars him to the quick ; why are they here , making their infernal din , blots on God's landscape ? The loud bassoon sings no jubilee for him , and the tart , squalling ...
Seite 11
... falls on his ear . The pines begin to moan and sigh ; a chariot of clouds comes driving across heaven , the moan changes into a roar ; and in a moment , with a great shout , the purple storm falls . It is the sweeping gale of summer ...
... falls on his ear . The pines begin to moan and sigh ; a chariot of clouds comes driving across heaven , the moan changes into a roar ; and in a moment , with a great shout , the purple storm falls . It is the sweeping gale of summer ...
Seite 12
... falls on the hot silence another peasant tune very different from the first . The man no longer shuns the rustics , but joins with them in their happy songs . The strain of violins , which begins at the ninth measure of the Alle- gretto ...
... falls on the hot silence another peasant tune very different from the first . The man no longer shuns the rustics , but joins with them in their happy songs . The strain of violins , which begins at the ninth measure of the Alle- gretto ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
achievement admirable amid artist atmosphere austere Bach Bach's bars beauty Beethoven Berlioz bitter Bohemia brilliant café Charles Hallé charm choir Chopin church circumstances clavichord colours composer compositions dark death drama emotion England English cathedrals Estelle expression feel FILSON YOUNG fugue genius grand grief happiness harmony hear heart HECTOR BERLIOZ human ideas imagination infinite instru instrument Irish kind Les Troyens listen living Lüneburg man's marvellous melody ment mind Mozart musical expression musician nature never night orchestra organ organ music organists Paris passionate Pastoral Symphony perfect perhaps piano played Requiem rhythm Richard Wagner Roméo et Juliette scene seems sense simple singing song soul sound spirit spring storm sure sweet sympathy symphony tears things thunder tion tone touch tragic Tristan und Isolde utterance voice Wagner whole wind writing wrote youth
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 147 - THE minstrel boy to the war is gone, In the ranks of death you'll find him ; His father's sword he has girded on, And his wild harp slung behind him. " Land of song !" said the warrior-bard, " Though all the world betrays thee, One sword, at least, thy rights shall guard, One faithful harp shall praise thee...
Seite 159 - Shall I find comfort, travel-sore and weak? Of labour you shall find the sum. Will there be beds for me and all who seek? Yea, beds for all who come.
Seite 202 - I dared not prolong, and which I could not enjoy because of my terrible efforts to restrain my emotions. ' Oh ! madame, madame, I have but one aim left in the world — that of obtaining your affection. Suffer me to try and attain it. I will be discreet and reserved; our correspondence shall not be more frequent than you desire. It shall never become a wearisome task to you ; a few lines from your hand will suffice. My visits can only be few and...
Seite 208 - Which of the two powers, Love or Music, can elevate man to the sublimest heights? It is a great question, and yet it seems to me that this is the answer: love can give no idea of music; music can give an idea of love . . . why separate them? They are the two wings of the soul.
Seite 182 - Idyl ; it is an epic instrument, like horns, trumpets, and trombones. Its voice is that of heroic love : and if masses of brass instruments, in grand military symphonies, awaken the idea of a warlike troop covered with glittering armour, marching to glory or death, numerous unisons of clarinets, heard at the same time, seem to represent the beloved women, the loving heroines, with their proud eyes, and deep affection, whom the sound of arms exalte ; who sing while fighting, and who crown the victors,...
Seite 105 - THEY dreamt not of a perishable home Who thus could build. Be mine, in hours of fear Or grovelling thought, to seek a refuge here ; Or through the aisles of Westminster to roam ; Where bubbles burst, and folly's dancing foam Melts, if it cross the threshold ; where the wreath Of awe-struck wisdom droops : or let my path Lead to that younger Pile, whose sky-like dome Hath typified...
Seite 183 - ... epic instruments. It possesses, in an eminent degree, both nobleness and grandeur ; it has all the deep and powerful accents of high musical poetry, — from the religious accent, calm and imposing, to the wild clamours of the orgy. It depends on the composer to make it by turn chaunt like a choir of priests...
Seite 59 - Quid sum, miser ! tune dicturus ? Quern patronum rogaturus ? Cum vix Justus sit securus.
Seite 207 - I have always found that the best way to make them calm and reasonable was to amuse them and give them pictures. I take the liberty of sending you one which will recall to you the reality of the present, and destroy the illusions of the past.
Seite 191 - ... radiant with smiles, adorned with all the charms of a perfect landscape, the mere sight of which was sufficient to move me. Estelle was then the hamadryad of my valley of Tempe; and at the age of twelve I experienced for the first time, and together, love and the love of nature. The other love came to me in my manhood, with Shakespeare, in the burning bush of Sinai, amid the thunders and lightnings of poetry entirely new to me.