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Updated: May 29, 2025
But it was different where the beholder was so situated that he could imagine himself riding or striding after the rapturous march-music to fields of peril and valour and glory, without diminishing the vividness of the picture by simultaneously supposing himself some quite other person.
For the rest of the evening, distraught and silent, I only heard the march-music of the band, playing on in some corner of my brain.
Then there was the Period of Gwron, Strength; when Marlowe and Shakespeare and Milton evolved the Grand Manner; when they made the great March-Music, unknown in English before, and hardly achieved by anyone since: the era of the great Warrior-poetry of the Tragedies and of Paradise Lost.
For some notes have all the sea in them, and some cathedral bells; others a woodland joyance and a smell of greenery; in some fauns dance to the merry reed, and even the grave centaurs peep out from their caves. Some bring moonlight, and some the deep crimson of a rose's heart; some are blue, some red, and others will tell of an army with silken standards and march-music.
For the rest of the evening, distraught and silent, I only heard the march-music of the band, playing on in some corner of my brain.
Let the old submit, and we'll cushion the world for them, and play them out of it with march-music! But they will fight us and they can't win!" His hands on his sides, Coryston stood confronting them all, his eyes glittering. "What stuff you do talk, Coryston!" said Arthur, half angrily, half contemptuously. "What good does it do to anybody?" And he resumed his restless walk.
It is only the plain truth to say that Sousa's marches have founded a school; that he has indeed revolutionized march-music. His career resembles that of Johann Strauss in many ways.
And so this particular pipe of the day always carries with it festal reminiscences: memories of holidays past, hopes for holidays to come; a suggestion of sunny lawns and flannels and the ungirt loin; a sense withal of something free and stately, as of ``faint march-music in the air, or the old Roman cry of ``Liberty, freedom, and enfranchisement.
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