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Chapter 2 THE ANCIENTS

Word Count: 1070    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

fairs he had were hardly happy; his suit was either declined with thanks, or, if accepted, ended in the death of the lady; as for himself-being a god, he was denied the comfortable convenience of

er son was Aesculapius. Which explains th

Plato's statement that "the greatest caution is to be taken not to suffer any change in well-moraled music, there being no corruption of manners in a republic so great as that which follows a gradual declination from a

s nurse could not find a compliment for him, and in fact dropped him and ran. Considering what one usually expects of a new-born infant, Pan must have been really unattractive. His lack of personal charm was the origin of the invention of Pan's pipes or syrinx. Miss Syrinx of the Naiad family-one of the first families of Arcadia-was so horrified when Pan proposed to her, that she fled. He pursued and she begged aid of certain ny

one except himself, and therein to have had no rivals. The famous fish story to the effect that when he was compelled to leap i

roperty. He was torn to pieces by frantic women, a fate that seems always to threaten

atonic affair with an angel; which caused her pagan husband a certain amount of natural anxiety.

hem-though happily not all. Abélard, for instance, was a monk, and his Héloise became a nun, and their love letters are among the most precious possessions in literature. Liszt, that Hungarian rhapsodist in amours, was he not also an abbé? There was a priest-musician, George de la Hèle, who about 1585 gave up a lucrative benefice to marry a woman dowered with the name Madalena Guabaelaraoen. But

of the disastrous infatuation of Angelus Politianus, who flourished in 1460 as

of an illustrious family, but whom he could neither corrupt by his great presents, nor by the force of his eloquence. The vexation he conceived at this disappointment was so great as to throw him into a burning fever; and in the violence of the fit he made two

Hamlet in a Western theatre, where, there being no orchestra, he was co

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Contents

The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 1 THE OVERTURE
01/12/2017
The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 2 THE ANCIENTS
01/12/2017
The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 3 THE MEN OF FLANDERS
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 4 ORLAND DI LASSUS AND HIS REGINA
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 5 HENRY AND FRANCES PURCELL
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 6 THE STRANGE ADVENTURES OF STRADELLA
01/12/2017
The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 7 GIOVANNI AND LUCREZIA PALESTRINA
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 8 BACH, THE PATRIARCH
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 9 PAPA AND MAMMA HAYDN
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 10 THE MAGNIFICENT BACHELOR
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 11 GLUCK THE DOMESTIC, ROUSSEAU THE CONFESSOR, AND THE AMIABLE PICCINNI
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 12 A FEW TUNESTERS OF FRANCE AND ITALY-PERI, MONTEVERDE, ET AL.
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 13 MOZART
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 14 BEETHOVEN THE GREAT BUMBLEBEE
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 15 VON WEBER-THE RAKE REFORMED
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The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 16 THE FELICITIES OF MENDELSSOHN
01/12/2017
The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 1
Chapter 17 THE NOCTURNES OF CHOPIN
01/12/2017
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