A CHAPTER ON EARS. I have no ear -
Mistake me not, reader, -- nor imagine t I am by nature destitute of terior turally speaking) es to tal. Better my motely ts; and I feel no disposition to envy ty, or tness, in ts -- telligencers.
Neito incur, , o feel quot;quite unabas; and at ease upon t article. I ars, in t, is it iny, t I ever should be.
I and me to mean -- for music. -- to say t t never melted at t sounds, ;ater parted from t; never fails to move it strangely. So does quot;In Infancy.quot; But to be sung at rument in vogue in tle-lest, sure, t ever merited tion -- test -- e to name Mrs. S----, once temple s; and to make remble, and blus not faintly indicated t absorbing sentiment, ined to overe, for Alice ----n.
I even t sentimentally I am disposed to organically I am incapable of a tune. I ising quot;God save t; all my life; o myself in solitary corners; and am not yet arrived, tell me, . Yet y of Elia never been impeached.
I am not suspicion, t I y of music urn, o say, quot; it could not be t; On surprise at ouc an airy and masterful dreaming of me, ed on Jenny. But a grace, snatc, soon convinced some being, -- tec, but o all ts, -- o a mood ed) ented from tion tration, and not h any view of disparaging Jenny.
Scientifically I could never be made to understand (yet aken some pains) e in music is; or e singuisenor. Only sometimes trive to guess at, from its being supereminently remble, ion of t terms of t o say I am ignorant of. I e, perenuto and adagio stand