[Lessons in Music Form by Percy Goetschius]@TWC D-Link book
Lessons in Music Form

CHAPTER III
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Thus:-- [Illustration: Example 8.

Fragments of Beethoven.] This example illustrates the interlinking of the figures, and suggests the difficulty that may be encountered in the effort to define melodic figures.

The difficulty is probably greatest in melodies of a lyric character, where it is necessary to sustain the coherency of the sentence; for instance, in many of the Songs Without Words,--see No.
40, No.

22, and others, in which an entirely definite separation of the figures is well-nigh a hopeless task.
For this reason,--that is, because the melodic divisions are so minute and vague between these smaller particles of the musical sentence,--it is advisable _to give no heed to any factor smaller than the "motive,"_ and to undertake the analysis of nothing less than the latter; for even the most scrupulous "phrasing," in the playing of a composition, must avoid the risk of incoherency almost certain to result from distinctly separating all the figures.

The melodies in Ex.


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