. The American educator; completely remodelled and rewritten from original text of the New practical reference library, with new plans and additional material. waslittle more than ababy, and when theboy was five yearsold he composedminuets. At six hewas taken with hislittle sister on a con-cert tour of Europeand everywherecreated a furore. Atthe age of sevenMozart publisbedseveral sonatas, andat eight could playthe difficult works ofBach and Handel. After 1769 he spent muchtime in Italy, and the influence of theSoixthern sojourns is largely responsible forthe balance of melodiousness and sunsh


. The American educator; completely remodelled and rewritten from original text of the New practical reference library, with new plans and additional material. waslittle more than ababy, and when theboy was five yearsold he composedminuets. At six hewas taken with hislittle sister on a con-cert tour of Europeand everywherecreated a furore. Atthe age of sevenMozart publisbedseveral sonatas, andat eight could playthe difficult works ofBach and Handel. After 1769 he spent muchtime in Italy, and the influence of theSoixthern sojourns is largely responsible forthe balance of melodiousness and sunshinewith German seriousness and vigor which arecharacteristic of his compositions. Mozartcontracted a happy marriage with a memberof the illustrious Weber family, and this, to-gether with the joy afforded by creative work,were the sole earthly recompense for a shortlife of hard work and poverty, embittered bythe enmity of jealous rivals. Mozarts productivity, was almost incredi-ble. He produced forty symphonies, twenty-five piano concertos, six violin concertos, andforty arias with orchestral part. His cham-ber music includes twenty-six string quartets,. MOZART seven string quintets and forty-two sonatasfor piano and violin. Those of his worksmost frequently performed are the operasThe Marriage of Figaro, Don Giovanni andThe Magic Flute; among sacred pieces, theimmortal Requiem, the Twelfth Mass and thefamous Ave Verum, and numerous sonatas,symphonies and pieces of chamber music. MUCILAG-E, musilaje, a jellylike prep-aration, made from vegetable gums andfrom starch. Many of the gums used formaking mucilage exude from trees; some ofthem are found in the form of clear roundishtears, and some are obtained by extractingthe mucilaginous substance from shrubs,quince, marshmallow and several others. MUCUS, a clear, sticky fluid, secreted bymucous membranes, forming a layer of great-er or less thickness oia their surface. Itcovers the lining membranes of all the cavitieswhich open exter


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhughesja, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1919