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)
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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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