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The Death of the President

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

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Extract

The Chairman: Before I introduce the Lecturer, there is a subject which must be mentioned, and which I have not the least doubt you have anticipated in your thoughts. I refer to the death of our lamented and honoured President, Dr. William Hayman Cummings. I am afraid that it is not at all uncommon, for such is human nature, to brush the news of a death aside as soon as we hear it, and go on at once with our usual occupations. Especially is there a tendency to do so when death has become cheap, as it is to-day through the prevailing great world-tragedy. But I am sure that neither you nor I are in a mood to take the present occurrence so. There are times when the finger of Death seems actually to touch us : when he comes, that is to say, into the family, or when things happen before our eyes. I think we may say that we are in a sense almost of the same family with the late President, looking to the intimate way in which he was mixed up with a large variety of interests where we also have been concerned. (Hear, hear.) To speak only of the institutions where he occupied quite a foremost place, there are the Royal Society of Musicians, the Royal Philharmonic Society, the Incorporated Society of Musicians, the Society of Antiquaries, the Musical News Syndicate, and our own Association.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1914

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