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The Ox Minuet

The Ox Minuet.jpg The Roadside InnThumbnailsFormal arrangements in London parksThe Roadside InnThumbnailsFormal arrangements in London parksThe Roadside InnThumbnailsFormal arrangements in London parksThe Roadside InnThumbnailsFormal arrangements in London parksThe Roadside InnThumbnailsFormal arrangements in London parksThe Roadside InnThumbnailsFormal arrangements in London parksThe Roadside InnThumbnailsFormal arrangements in London parks
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Haydn saw with surprise a butcher call upon him one day, who being as sensible to the charms of his works as any other person, said freely to him, “Sir, I know you are both good and obliging, therefore I address myself to you with full confidence;—you excel in all kinds of composition; you are the first of composers: but I am particularly fond of your minuets. I stand in need of one, that is pretty, and quite new, for my daughter’s wedding, which is to take place in a few days, and I cannot address myself better than to the famous Haydn.”—Haydn, always full of kindness, smiled at this new homage, and promised it to him on the following day. The amateur returned at the appointed time, and received with joyful gratitude the precious gift. Shortly after, the sound of instruments struck Haydn’s ear.—He listened, and thought he recollected his new minuet. He went to his window, from whence he saw a superb Ox, with gilded horns, adorned with festoons and garlands, and surrounded by an ambulating orchestra, stopping under his balcony. Haydn was roused from his reverie by the butcher, who made his appearance in his apartment, and again expressed his sentiments of admiration, and concluded his speech, by saying, “Dear Sir, I thought that a butcher could not express his gratitude for so beautiful a minuet better than by offering you the finest Ox in his possession.”—Haydn refused—the butcher entreated, till at length Haydn, affected at the butcher’s frank generosity, accepted the present, and from that moment the minuet was known throughout Vienna by the name of the Ox Minuet, and has lately been introduced as a musical curiosity in England.

Author
Title: The Power of Music
In which is shown, by a variety of pleasing and instructive anecdotes, the effects it has on man and animals.
Author: Anonymous
Available from gutenberg.org
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