A Biography of Sidney Lanier by Edwin Mims
page 33 of 60 (55%)
page 33 of 60 (55%)
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It is needless to add that the destroying angel of war wrecked ruthlessly
all these beautiful ambitions. "Lanier's passion for music asserted itself at every opportunity. His flute and guitar furnished recreation for himself and pleasant entertainment for the friends dropping in upon him. As a master of the flute he was said to be, even at eighteen, without an equal in Georgia. `Tutor Lanier,' I find myself recording at the time, `is the finest flute-player you or I ever saw. It is perfectly splendid -- his playing. He is far famed for it. His flute cost fifty dollars, and he runs the notes as easily as any one on the piano. Description is inadequate.'"* -- * "Recollections and Letters of Sidney Lanier", by Milton H. Northrup. `Lippincott's Magazine', March, 1905. -- Before he was twenty years old, then, the master passions of Lanier's soul -- scholarship, music, and to a less degree poetry -- had asserted themselves. He had a right to look forward to a brilliant future. Chapter III. A Confederate Soldier From his dreams of music and poetry and from the ideal he had formed |
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