British name, as well as that it would apply the power of sounds in a manner more amazingly forcible than perhaps has yet been known, and I am sure to an end much more worthy. Had the vast sums which have been laid out upon operas without skill or conduct,... The Musical World - 310. oldal1860Teljes nézet - Információ erről a könyvről
| John Hawkins - 1875 - 504 oldal
...known, and I am sure to an end ' much more worthy. Had the vast sums which ' have been laid out tipon operas without skill or ' conduct, and to no other...engine so formed, ' as to strike the minds of half a people at once in ' a place of worship with a forgetfulness of present ' care and calamity, and a... | |
| Royal Historical Society (Great Britain) - 1880 - 328 oldal
...amazingly forcible than perhaps has yet been known, and I am sure to an end much more worthy. Had the vast sums which have been laid out upon operas without...been disposed this way, we should now perhaps have had an engine BO formed as to strike the minds of half a people at once in a place of worship with... | |
| William Sparrow Simpson - 1880 - 322 oldal
...amazingly forcible than perhaps has yet been known, and I am sure to an end much more worthy. Had the vast sums which have been laid out upon operas without...been disposed this way, we should now perhaps have had an engine so formed as to strike the minds of half a people at once in a place of worship with... | |
| John Skelton Bumpus - 1891 - 292 oldal
...amazingly and forcible than perhaps has yet been known, and I am sure to an end much more worthy. Had the vast sums which have been laid out upon operas without...an engine so formed as to strike the minds of half the people at once in a place of worship with a forgetfulness of present care and calamity, and a hope... | |
| George Atherton Aitken - 1898 - 438 oldal
...amazingly forcible than, perhaps, has yet been known, and I am sure to an end much more worthy. Had the vast sums which have been laid out upon operas without...been disposed this way, we should now, perhaps, have had an engine so formed as to strike the minds of half a people at once in a place of worship with... | |
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