id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 19676 Naylor, Edward W. (Edward Woodall) Shakespeare and Music With Illustrations from the Music of the 16th and 17th centuries .txt text/plain 43907 4723 90 lady's guests to sing unaccompanied music from "parts," after supper; Chappell's Old English Popular Music gives a passage from a letter of to sing it." For the music and words, see Hawkins, pp. and Instruments, (2) Musical Education, (3) Songs and Singing, (4) The following lines, though not in a play, are so full of musical of several passages on Shakespeare, where 'broken music' is referred A long time out of _play_, may bring his _plain-song_, music, accompanied by viols and harps, with songs and catches, were music, and scraps of the actual words of old songs--some with sir.' Further on, Paris also plays on the term 'broken' music. There is an old song, given in Chappell's Popular Music, 'O Death, dances of the time, as far as words can do it; dance tunes in music Elizabethan times, music in, 2, 4-8, 16, 113, 114 (dances) ff. ./cache/19676.txt ./txt/19676.txt