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would fain have _some music_. (After supper, in a cooler room.) _Id._ l. 227. _Page._ The _music_ is come, sir. _Falstaff._ Let them _play_.---- _Play_, sirs. _Id._ l. 380. _Fal._ _Pay the musicians_, sirrah. The term 'Sneak's noise' is most interesting. 'Noise' means a company of musicians, and Mr Sneak was the gentleman who gave his name to the particular band of instrumentalists who favoured the Boar's Head. Milton uses the word, in this sense, in the poem 'At a Solemn Music,' where the 'saintly shout' of the seraphic choir, with 'loud uplifted angel-trumpets,' 'immortal harps of golden wires,' and the singing of psalms and hymns, are collectively called 'that melodious _noise_.' Also in his Hymn on the Nativity, verse ix., he has 'stringed _noise_'--_i.e._, band of stringed instruments. The Prayer-book Version (Great Bible) of the Psalms, which was made in 1540, has the word in Ps. lxxxi. 1, 'Make a cheerful _noise_ unto the God of Jacob,' and this in the next verses is said to consist of various musical instruments--_e.g._, the tabret, harp, lute, and trumpet. Also in the Authorised Version of 1611, Ps. xxxiii. 3, 'play skilfully with a loud _noise_,' which was the instrumental accompaniment to a 'new song.' The same word is used in several other places, with the meaning of 'music'--_e.g._, Pss. lxvi. 1; xcv. 1, 2; xcviii. 4, 6; c. 1; where 'to make a joyful noise' is represented in the original by the same verb, except in one of the two cases in Ps. xcviii. 4. The word was still in use in 1680, when Dr Plot was present at the annual Bull-running held by the Minstrels of Tutbury, one of the features of which festivity was a banquet, with 'a Noise of musicians playing to them.' The reputed cure of the Tarantula's bite by music has already been mentioned. The next three examples are of somewhat similar cases. In the first, Henry IV. in sickness asks for music; the second is an account of Cerimon's attempt to rouse the half-drowned Thaisa with at least partial assistance from music; while the third represents Prospero using a solemn air to remove the magic spell which he had cast on Alonso and his other enemies. _H. 4. B._ IV, iv, 133. K. Hen. on his sick-bed. _K. Hen._ Let there be no noise made, my gentle friends; Unless some _dull and favourable hand_ Will _whisper music_ to my wearied spirit. _Warwick._ Call for the _music
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