Monthly Archives: March 2026

“the English language, which is so expressive of the sublimest Sentiments”

 

Having already lost a lot of money earlier in the season, Handel now realized the folly of his gamble, and announced in London’s Daily Advertiser that he was closing his ambitious season early. He eloquently expressed the profound sorrow this failure* had given him in his announcement: “As I perceived, that joining good Sense and significant Words to Musick was the best Method of recommending this to an English Audience; I have directed my Studies that way, and endeavour’d to show, that the English language, which is so expressive of the sublimest Sentiments, [italics added] is the best adapted … to the full and solemn Kind of Musick. I have the Mortification now to find that my Labours to please are become ineffectual.” (program notes, Carnegie Hall)

*The premiere of his oratorio Hercules, in January 1745.

 

posted by Roger W. Smith

    March 2026

new vocabulary

 

new vocabulary – March 2026

 

I continue to look up new words and those the meaning of which intrigues me.

See above Word document.

 

– posted by Roger W. Smith

   March 2026

 

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See also:

 

 

more new vocabulary

 

 

new vocabulary, February-May 2025

 

 

new vocabulary

 

 

new vocabulary (looked up by me in past few months)

 

 

new vocabulary

 

 

new vocabulary post

 

 

new vocabulary IV

 

 

new vocabulary III

 

 

Vocabulary: Building and Using One’s Own; The Delight of Same; Its Value to a Writer

 

 

 

a deft turn of phase

 

What was once shocking becomes quaint: That’s how it goes. The Charleston now looks like a silly dance, Elvis is just a sweaty guy, nobody’s fainting while watching screenings of “The Exorcist” anymore and jazz is now the province of TURTLENECKED NERDS. We’re assured there was a time when van Gogh’s paintings horrified audiences, but today reproductions of them hang in college dorm rooms. This process is not tragic; as these things lose their power to shock, they reveal new virtues. Nothing stays boundary-pushing forever. …

— “The Greatest Love Story of All Time Is Also the Strangest,” By B.D. McClay, The New York Times, February 14,  2026

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   March 2026