Under every flower he had itsmadrigal written by N.
The following elegant translation of a Spanish madrigal of the kind here criticised I found in a newspaper, but it is evidently by a master-hand.
Under every flower a space was left open for a madrigal on the subject of the flower there painted.
A mezzo soprano then begins a tuneful madrigal of a pastoral character, pleasantly melodious but which hardly gives the idea, in full, of a certain stilted artificiality which is the peculiar flavour of the period.
He upheld Bononcini in the great madrigal controversy, and appears to have wearied Handel by his repeated visits.
To all this goodly company I sing as best I may, A madrigal of ladies fair And damsels soote and gay.
First to the Tetzels to teach the young ones a madrigal to sing for Master Jost's fiftieth birthday.
Preciosa left the madrigal in the hands of the gentleman, not liking to ask for it, lest she should again distress Andrew; for she knew, without any one teaching her, what it was to make a lover feel the pangs of jealousy.
I remember it well," said Andrew; "it was a madrigal in your praise, and no bad one either.
Are you Gabriel de Espinosa, who has come toMadrigal to set up as a pastry-cook?
He at once dispatched Don Juan de Llano, the Apostolic Commissary of the Holy Office to Madrigal to sift the matter, and ordered that Anne should be solitarily confined in her cell, and her nuns-in-waiting and servants placed under arrest.
The Elizabethan love of madrigal playing gradually gave way to a taste for instrumental music, including organs and flutes.
Yet until the shadows fall Over one and over all, Sing a merrymadrigal - Fal la!
Ballad: A Merry Madrigal Brightly dawns our wedding day; Joyous hour, we give thee greeting!
Only what is measurably of rank, in truth and fineness, with the literature which has endured from past times can be defended for use there.
With simply a clear space in the classroom for a stage, you and your imaginations can give all the performance necessary for realizing these plays very well indeed.
No play can be given publicly without an individual arrangement.
The inclusion of his name in this connection gives Byrd the claim to be considered one of the first, if not the first, of English Madrigal writers.
This is merely a supposition, but there must be some reason for the exclusion of such a distinguished composer, and one already famous as a Madrigal writer.
His paper on Weelkes (Musical Association, May, 1916) is an eloquent testimony to the worth of this composer, to whose madrigal writing I have not space quite to do justice.
Fellowes, whose devotion to the madrigal school is so well known and appreciated.
Chorus: They drowned it all in a madrigal Like this, at The Mermaid Inn.
In every tavern it soured the sack With discord and with din; But they drowned it all in a madrigal Like this, at The Mermaid Inn.
Source: A copy of the Madrigal edition of Mendoza's Historia, in the Library of Congress.
Such part of this work as relates to the Philippines is here presented; it is obtained from a copy of the Madrigal edition (Madrid, 1586), in the Library of Congress.
Alice tossed her head in a petulant silence; and a madrigal by the college choir checked any further remarks from Mr. Pryce.
After the madrigal came a general move for refreshments, which were set out in the college library and in the garden.
The madrigal was an altogether more serious form of art, and, except for the words, might be identified with the best specimens of ecclesiastical music.
The beautiful "Since First I Saw your Face," by Thomas Ford, can hardly be described by either title, for while it is removed in tone from the glee it lacks the atmosphere of the schools that the madrigal suggests.
The transition from one to the other would seem natural, seeing the extreme elaboration that rendered the madrigal difficult of interpretation to any but highly-skilled singers.
Or in a carriage à la mode, Land of the madrigal and ode, Of rainbow air and cloudless weather?
To draw any parallel between the theft of such unattractive details in the grand and intensely Handelian scheme of Israel in Egypt and Buononcini's alleged theft of a prize madrigal is merely ridiculous.
The Framsby Glee and Madrigal Meistersingers were giving a spirited rendering of "Auld Lang Syne.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "madrigal" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.