Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme;The Shopkeeper Turned Gentleman by Molière
page 11 of 122 (09%)
page 11 of 122 (09%)
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MR. JOUR. I will learn it, then; but I hardly know how I shall find
time for it; for, besides the fencing master who teaches me, I have engaged a professor of philosophy, who is to begin this morning. MUS. MAS. Philosophy is something, no doubt; but music, Sir, music.... DAN. MAS. Music and dancing, Sir; in music and dancing we have all that we need. MUS. MAS. There is nothing so useful in a state as music. DAN. MAS. There is nothing so necessary to men as dancing. MUS. MAS. Without music no kingdom can exist. DAN. MAS. Without dancing a man can do nothing. MUS. MAS. All the disorders, all the wars that happen in the world, are caused by nothing but the want of music. DAN. MAS. All the sorrows and troubles of mankind, all the fatal misfortunes which fill the pages of history, the blunders of statesmen, the failures of great captains, all these come from the want of a knowledge of dancing. MR. JOUR. How is that? MUS. MAS. Does not war arise from a want of concord between them? MR. JOUR. True. |
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