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Extract
“… once we have recognised that knowledge in itself is good for man, we shall need to invent no pretexts for studying this subject or that; we shall import no extraneous considerations of use or ornament to justify us in learning one thing rather than another.”
This short extract from Professor Housman's Introductory Lecture delivered before the Faculties of Arts and Laws and of Science in University College, London, in the year 1892, is set down here to help me to disencumber my mind and to tell a plain tale in simple words; indeed, you too will have pondered upon those things which appertain to Music Studies. Throughout this Paper “I tell you that which you yourselves do know,” and I shall hope to be instructed in the Discussion.
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- Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1944
References
1 Julius Cæsar III, ii, Antony.Google Scholar
2 S. H. Butcher. Fourth edition, 1932 (Macmillan).Google Scholar
3 Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Idea; volume I, page 333. And see also volume III, third book, chapter xxxix. On the Metaphysics of Music (connected with paragraph 52 of the first volume). Trans. by R. B. Haldane and J. Kemp (Kegan Paul, 1896).Google Scholar
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5 Esemplare o sia saggio fondamentale pratico di contrappunto sopra il canto fermo da F. Giambattista Martini. Bologna, 1775. Regole di Contrappunto: “Oltre gli Elementi di Contrappunto, de’ quali e necessario sia instruito il Giovine Compositore, deve ancora possedere a perfezione almeno le Arti del Canto, e del Suono dell’ Organo, senza le quali due Arti non potra rendersi perfetto Compositore.Google Scholar
Thus does Martini begin, and he has an elaborate footnote extending his argument.Google Scholar
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