New Edition, with Illustrations.

LONDON:
W. REEVES, 83, CHARING CROSS ROAD, W.C.
Office of "The Musical Standard."


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

I.—Pneumatic-Organ from a MS. Psalter of Eadwine in the Library of Trinity College, Cambridge [(Frontispiece).]
II.—Peruvian Pan's Pipes, Double Set. From a Tomb in Africa [10]
III.—Early Form of the Regals. From Lucinius' Musurgia, sen Praxis Musicæ, 1536 [19]
IV.—From Gori's Thesaurus Diptychorum. Said to be from an Ancient MS. of the Time of Charlemagne [22]
V.—A Positive Organ. From Ambrosius Wilphlingseder's Erotemata, Musices Praticae, Nuremberg, 1563 [31]
VI.—A Curious Engraving showing an Organist Performing upon an Instrument with Broad Keys. From Franchinus Gaffurius' Theorica Musica, 1492 [34]
VII.—The Ancient Mode of Organ Blowing. From Praetorius' Theatrum Instrumentorum, 1620 [46]
VIII.—Terra-Cotta Model of Hydraulic Organ. Cir. 150 a.d. Carthage Museum. From Hermann Smith's "The Making of Sound in the Organ and in the Orchestra" [47]
IX.—Rev. F. W. Galpin's Working Reproduction of the Roman Hydraulus. From Hermann Smith's "The Making of Sound in the Organ and in the Orchestra" [48]

SECTION I.

PERUVIAN PAN'S PIPES, DOUBLE SET. FROM A TOMB IN AFRICA.