[The Coming Race by Edward Bulwer Lytton]@TWC D-Link book
The Coming Race

CHAPTER XVII
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Still, even in music the absence of stimulus in praise or fame has served to prevent any great superiority of one individual over another; and we rather excel in choral music, with the aid of our vast mechanical instruments, in which we make great use of the agency of water,* than in single performers." * This may remind the student of Nero's invention of a musical machine, by which water was made to perform the part of an orchestra, and on which he was employed when the conspiracy against him broke out.
"We have had scarcely any original composer for some ages.

Our favorite airs are very ancient in substance, but have admitted many complicated variations by inferior, though ingenious, musicians." "Are there no political societies among the Ana which are animated by those passions, subjected to those crimes, and admitting those disparities in condition, in intellect, and in morality, which the state of your tribe, or indeed of the Vril-ya generally, has left behind in its progress to perfection?
If so, among such societies perhaps Poetry and her sister arts still continue to be honoured and to improve ?" "There are such societies in remote regions, but we do not admit them within the pale of civilised communities; we scarcely even give them the name of Ana, and certainly not that of Vril-ya.

They are savages, living chiefly in that low stage of being, Koom-Posh, tending necessarily to its own hideous dissolution in Glek-Nas.

Their wretched existence is passed in perpetual contest and perpetual change.

When they do not fight with their neighbours, they fight among themselves.


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