Musical Backgrounds for English Literature: 1580-1650Rutgers University Press, 1962 - 292 pages The author traces the history of metaphysical ideas about music and explores the place of these in the poetry of Milton. |
From inside the book
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Page 61
... singing of psalms if they were sung " in a plain tune , easy both to be sung of those which have no art in singing , and understood of those which because they cannot read cannot sing with the rest of the church . " Whitgift declared in ...
... singing of psalms if they were sung " in a plain tune , easy both to be sung of those which have no art in singing , and understood of those which because they cannot read cannot sing with the rest of the church . " Whitgift declared in ...
Page 168
... singing of the Lady is " ravishing , " too , in an entirely acceptable sense , without any perceptible distinction in musical sound itself , in tempo , dynamics , pitch , harmonic texture , or style of singing . What then determines the ...
... singing of the Lady is " ravishing , " too , in an entirely acceptable sense , without any perceptible distinction in musical sound itself , in tempo , dynamics , pitch , harmonic texture , or style of singing . What then determines the ...
Page 168
... singing of the Lady is " ravishing , " too , in an entirely acceptable sense , without any perceptible distinction in musical sound itself , in tempo , dynamics , pitch , harmonic texture , or style of singing . What then determines the ...
... singing of the Lady is " ravishing , " too , in an entirely acceptable sense , without any perceptible distinction in musical sound itself , in tempo , dynamics , pitch , harmonic texture , or style of singing . What then determines the ...
Contents
A World of Instruments | 1 |
A Book of Knowledge | 21 |
A Religious Controversy | 47 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Musical Backgrounds for English Literature: 1580-1650 (Classic Reprint) Gretchen Ludke Finney No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
according Adonis ancient beauty body breath called carried catena d'Adone cause century chorus church classical completely composed Comus dance described divine drama early effects elements Elizabethan emotions English entirely especially explained feeling Ficino follows give given Greek harmony hear heart heaven Henry human idea imagined influence instrument interest Italian Italy John kind later Lawes less lines London lost Lycidas means melody Milton mind motion move musician nature notes organ Orpheus parallel passage passions pastoral performance person philosophy Plato play poem poet poetry possible present produced proportion question reason recitative rhythm Rome Samson sense similar singing song soul sound speech spirit strings style suggests sung sweet theory things Thomas thought tion tune turn universe verse voice whole writing written wrote York