FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   >>  
gradual development of the art, all history, as well as the evidence of common sense, proves that they gave no help whatever at the commencement. The savage has never been inspired by them; his music, when he has any, is a mere noise, not deducible by any stretch of the imagination from such sounds of nature. The national melodies of various countries give no evidence of any influence from without. A collection of native airs from different parts of the world will help us to no theory as to whether they have been composed in valleys or on plains, by resounding sea-shores or by roaring waterfalls. There is nothing in the music itself which tells of the natural sounds most common in the desolate steppes of Russia, the woody sierras of Spain, or the rocky glens of Scotland. What analogy there exists is solely with the inward character of the people themselves, and that too profound to be theorised upon. If we search the works of the earliest composers, we find not the slightest evidence of their having been inspired by any outward agencies. Not till the art stood upon its own independent foundations does it appear that any musicians ever thought of turning such natural sounds to account; and--though with Beethoven's exquisite Pastoral Symphony ringing in our ears, with its plaintive clarionet cuckoo to contradict our words--we should say that no compositions could be of a high class in which such sounds were conspicuous.--_Murray's Reading for the Rail._ THE ARCHARD LEVER POWER. Our attention has been invited to an invention of a very remarkable character, which, if realising the claims asserted in its behalf, will fully equal, if it does not far exceed in importance, any discovery of the age. It consists in an entirely new application of the power of the lever, an application capable of being multiplied to an almost unlimited extent. To render our account of this new marvel quite incredible in the outset, we will state on the inventor's authority, that the steam of an ordinary tea-kettle may be made to produce sufficient momentum to propel a steamship of any size across the Atlantic! Or, again, one man may exert a power equal to that of a thousand horses, and that, too, without the aid of steam or any auxiliary other than his own stout arm. It overcomes or disproves the heretofore-received principle in mechanics, of not gaining power without a loss of speed. Archimedes, in declaring his ability to move the w
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   >>  



Top keywords:
sounds
 

evidence

 

inspired

 

common

 

application

 

natural

 
character
 

account

 

exceed

 

consists


Murray

 

conspicuous

 

discovery

 

contradict

 
Reading
 

importance

 

compositions

 

invention

 

invited

 

attention


remarkable
 

realising

 

behalf

 
ARCHARD
 
claims
 

asserted

 

inventor

 

auxiliary

 

horses

 

thousand


overcomes

 

disproves

 

declaring

 

Archimedes

 

ability

 

received

 

heretofore

 
principle
 

mechanics

 

gaining


Atlantic

 

render

 
marvel
 
incredible
 

extent

 

capable

 
multiplied
 

unlimited

 
outset
 

momentum