| William Shakespeare - 1888 - 508 pages
...Touching musical harmony, whether by instrument or by voice, it being but of high and low sounds in a due proportionable disposition, such, notwithstanding...harmony.' For this quotation I am indebted to Dr Farmer. Du Bois ( The Wreath, p. 60) : The correspondent passage in Plato is in his tenth book De Republica;... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1888 - 500 pages
...Touching musical harmony, whether by instrument or by voice, it being but of high and low sounds in a due proportionable disposition, such, notwithstanding...harmony.' For this quotation I am indebted to Dr Farmer. Du Bois ( The Wreath, p. 60) : The correspondent passage in Plato is in his tenth book De Republica... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1888 - 504 pages
...Touching musical harmony, whether by instrument or by voice, it being but of high and low sounds in a due proportionable disposition, such, notwithstanding...harmony." For this quotation I am indebted to Dr Farmer. Du Bois ( The Wreath, p. 60) : The correspondent passage in Plato is in his tenth book Dt Republica... | |
| William Francis Collier - American literature - 1888 - 560 pages
...due proportionable disposition, such notwithstanding is the force thereof, and so pleasing effeets it hath in that very part of man which is most divine,...the soul itself by nature is, or hath in it, harmony ; a thing which delighteth all ages, and beseemeth all states; a thing as seasonable in grief as in... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1888 - 534 pages
...Farmer gives a quotation from Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity, book v. : " Touching musical harmony . . . so pleasing effects it hath in that very part of man...thereby induced to think, that the soul itself by nature i» or hath in .'•• hartnany " (Var. Ed. vol. vp 140). In line 66 the reading Is that of Q. 2 ;... | |
| John Wesley Hales - Authors, English - 1889 - 442 pages
...instrnment or voice, it being bnt of high and low in sonnds a dne proportionable disposition, snch notwithstanding is the force thereof, and so pleasing...part of man which is most divine, that some have been hereby indnced to think that the sonl itself by natnre is, or hath in it, harmony." By "some" Hooker... | |
| J. Milton - 1891 - 306 pages
...sung the air. 246 — 8. In Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity, Bk. V. we read: "Touching musical harmony. ..so pleasing effects it hath in that very part of...the soul itself by nature is or hath in it harmony." This theory the Glosse to the Shepheards Calender, October refers to its original holders: "What the... | |
| John Milton - 1891 - 322 pages
...sung the air. 246 — 8. In Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity, Bk. v. we read: "Touching musical harmony. ..so pleasing effects it hath in that very part of...the soul itself by nature is or hath in it harmony." This theory the Glosse to the Shepheards Calender, October refers to its original holders : "What the... | |
| William Shakespeare - Promptbooks - 1892 - 202 pages
...instrument or by voice, it being but of high and low sounds in a due proportionable disposition, soch, notwithstanding, is the force thereof, and so pleasing...soul itself, by nature is, or hath in it, harmony." But, though this harmony is within us, "this muddy vesture of decay," as the poet tells us, "doth grossly... | |
| Francis Henry Underwood - English literature - 1892 - 668 pages
...TOUCHING musical harmony, whether by instrument or by voice, it being but of high and low in sounds a due proportionable disposition, such notwithstanding is...been thereby induced to think that the soul itself bynature is, or hath in it, harmony ; a thing which delighteth all ages, and beseemeth all states ;... | |
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