Chapter
1 I | night, listen to the organ music, the~chanting of the services,
2 I | Strangely~enough, the organ music seemed to belong to the
3 I | reverence due to the Homer of music. From among all the scores~
4 I | because the spirit of~sacred music finds therein its supreme
5 I | change that came over the music. Joy for the~victory of
6 I | grandest national airs with her music. A~Spaniard's fingers would
7 I | listen any longer. The nun's music had been a revelation of
8 II | s spirit~found wings in music and fled towards him, throbbing
9 II | Then, in all its might, the~music burst forth and filled the
10 II | light of the~Sanctuary. The music is the one interpreter strong
11 II | Magnificat. She had~enriched the music with graceful variations,
12 II | present, and past. Is not music, and even opera music, a
13 II | not music, and even opera music, a sort of~text, which a
14 II | hear all that~lies in great music? Religion, love, and music--
15 II | love and seistrons of gold--music~and light and harmony. Is
16 II | the nun had seized upon music as an~outpouring of the
17 II | she it is who~directs the music in the chapel."~ ~"Oh!"
18 III| in short? Architecture, music, and~poetry, everything
19 VII| exquisite songs of modern music, and so baffled~the physical
20 VII| alphabet and phraseology of~music are but cunning instruments
21 VII| man of science there is a music existing apart,~underlying
22 VII| such a song; a mysterious music~unknown to all other ears,
23 VII| know that there was such music in a piano," he~returned.~ ~"
24 X | under the wall to hear the music of~the organ, listening
25 X | the confused effect of music was all~that reached his
26 X | again at the breath of that music; he tried to find~auguries
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