excerpt from 'The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself' pp. 16 (165 words)

excerpt from 'The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself' pp. 16 (165 words)

part of

The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

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16

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text excerpt

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[During his last year as a Bluecoat scholar at the Free School in Gainsborough, Thomas Cooper became a choirboy in the church]

 

My preferment to the singing-loft had a more important result.  It brought to our house the father of the organist, old Mr. Hand, a gentlemanly person, though he had a wooden leg.  He was a great player on the dulcimer.  The instrument was soon brought to our house; and I became so enamoured of it, that my mother eventually purchased it for thirty shillings.  A few lessons, by the ear, I had from the old gentleman; and soon was able to play, by the ear, any tune I knew, or heard sung or played in the street.  How often I have wished that the dulcimer had been a violin, or a pianoforte, and that I had been taught music by the notes,—had been taught to read music at that age.  Such wishes are vain; but l have them, and of various forms.

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excerpt from 'The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself' pp. 16 (165 words)

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