| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford - 1832 - 650 pages
...of expressing those fine shades of feeling which can be communicated only by the aid of reflection. Music, History of. In the preceding part of this article,...beginning, only as an accompaniment. According to the Mosaic records, Jubal, the son of Lainech, played on musical instruments, even before the deluge.... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford, Henry Vethake - 1832 - 656 pages
...of expressing those fine shades of feeling which can be communicated only by the aid of reflection. Music, History of. In the preceding part of this article,...probable that shepherds first cultivated music as an an, while warriors may have made use of the exciting war-cry and war-song before. Instruments, as was... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth - 1832 - 626 pages
...instruments; so that, as for as respects the known history of this art, we must consider the devefopement of vocal and instrumental music as coeval. Perhaps...the wind whistle among the reeds. It seems probable mat shepherds first cultivated music as an art, while warriors may have made use of the exciting war-cry... | |
| Encyclopaedia Americana - 1832 - 620 pages
...instrumente; so that, as far as respects the known history of this art, we must consider ihe deveîopement of vocal and instrumental music as coeval. Perhaps...life of leisure, heard the wind whistle among the rerds. It seems probable that shepherds first cultivated music as an art, while warriors may have made... | |
| Sir Daniel Keyte Sandford - 1837 - 528 pages
...instruments ; so that, as far as res]>ects the known history of this art, we must consider the development of vocal and instrumental music as coeval. Perhaps...beginning, only as an accompaniment. According to the Mosaic records, Juhal, the son of Lamech, played on musical instruments, even before the deluge.... | |
| 1845 - 440 pages
...not later, was music born. So far as respects the known history of the art, we must consider the rise of vocal and instrumental music as coeval. Perhaps the first instrument invented, as we hinted before, was the pipe of the shepherd, who had heard the wind whistle among the reeds.... | |
| 1845 - 864 pages
...not later, was music born. So far as respects the known history of the art, we must consider the rise of vocal and instrumental music as coeval. Perhaps the first instrument invented, as we hinted before, was the pipe of the shepherd, who had heard the wind whistle among the reeds.... | |
| Popular encyclopedia - 1846 - 1018 pages
...instruments ; so that, as far as respects the known history of this art, we must consider the development of vocal and instrumental music as coeval. Perhaps...warriors may have made use of the exciting war-cry and war-soup before. Instruments, as was observed aliove, served, in the beginning, only as an accompaniment.... | |
| 1846 - 544 pages
...not later, was music born. So far as respects the known history of the art, we must consider the rise of vocal and instrumental music as coeval. Perhaps...instrument invented was the pipe of the shepherd, who had heard the wind whistle among the reeds. It is probable that while warriors early began to utter... | |
| Miss Ludlow - 1851 - 486 pages
...music was developed to that degree of perfection which we admire in the works of the greatest masters. Perhaps the first instrument invented was the pipe...made use of the exciting war-cry and war-song before. From the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, there grew up at the courts of monarchs the free chamber... | |
| |