Boris Lensky

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Boris Lensky by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner), Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner) ISBN: 9781465604132
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
ISBN: 9781465604132
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
Whoever wishes to know how great is the power which the charm of music can exercise over humanity must visit one of Boris Lensky's concerts. Boris Lensky! The name in itself has a legendary sound--a magic fascination surrounds the man and his violin. For every one who has attended one of his concerts, the longing, listening expression on the faces of the women who hear him is something which remains forever interwoven in remembrance with the complaining sweetness of his art. The best and noblest of women, when they listen to his wonderful violin, fall into a feverish trance which makes them lose all power over themselves. "In Russia they call Boris Lensky the devil's violinist, and in explanation of the godless charm which glows in his art, the following neat little tale is told: "Almost fifty years ago, crept through the poorest quarter of Moscow a neglected, ugly child, who, in order to earn his scanty food, scraped his violin as best he might, and sometimes received a copeck, but never a caress. This child was Boris Lensky. His heart languished for tenderness, like that of all repulsed ones. Then the devil met him, and allured him with splendid temptations. He would lay the whole world at his feet, if the boy would give him his soul for his own in exchange. But the boy felt a terror at this hellish slavery and said: 'No.' Then the devil at first went his way, and gnashed his teeth that he had not succeeded in capturing a human soul. But suddenly he turned back and called to the boy: 'I desire nothing of you; keep your soul; but you shall accept a present from me--a gift. In your art shall dwell a charm which no one can resist.' "Then the boy was astonished at the devil's generosity, and accepted the gift. But the devil rejoiced, for he said to himself: 'If I have lost one soul, I have taken ten thousand others for it.' But the violinist soon noticed what a curse had fallen to his share. "Denying all nobility, and still feeling a horror of the degrading power within him, he now goes through the world, restless, joyless, and without power over his own demoniac art--a resisting tool in the devil's hand. And he longs despairingly to find a being who could resist the fiendish charm, but he finds none.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Whoever wishes to know how great is the power which the charm of music can exercise over humanity must visit one of Boris Lensky's concerts. Boris Lensky! The name in itself has a legendary sound--a magic fascination surrounds the man and his violin. For every one who has attended one of his concerts, the longing, listening expression on the faces of the women who hear him is something which remains forever interwoven in remembrance with the complaining sweetness of his art. The best and noblest of women, when they listen to his wonderful violin, fall into a feverish trance which makes them lose all power over themselves. "In Russia they call Boris Lensky the devil's violinist, and in explanation of the godless charm which glows in his art, the following neat little tale is told: "Almost fifty years ago, crept through the poorest quarter of Moscow a neglected, ugly child, who, in order to earn his scanty food, scraped his violin as best he might, and sometimes received a copeck, but never a caress. This child was Boris Lensky. His heart languished for tenderness, like that of all repulsed ones. Then the devil met him, and allured him with splendid temptations. He would lay the whole world at his feet, if the boy would give him his soul for his own in exchange. But the boy felt a terror at this hellish slavery and said: 'No.' Then the devil at first went his way, and gnashed his teeth that he had not succeeded in capturing a human soul. But suddenly he turned back and called to the boy: 'I desire nothing of you; keep your soul; but you shall accept a present from me--a gift. In your art shall dwell a charm which no one can resist.' "Then the boy was astonished at the devil's generosity, and accepted the gift. But the devil rejoiced, for he said to himself: 'If I have lost one soul, I have taken ten thousand others for it.' But the violinist soon noticed what a curse had fallen to his share. "Denying all nobility, and still feeling a horror of the degrading power within him, he now goes through the world, restless, joyless, and without power over his own demoniac art--a resisting tool in the devil's hand. And he longs despairingly to find a being who could resist the fiendish charm, but he finds none.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book A Woman's Love by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book La desheredada by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book Tales of the Trail: Short Stories of Western Life by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book Practical Lithography by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book K. K. K. Sketches, Humorous and Didactic Treating The More Important Events of The Ku-Klux-Klan Movement in The South With a Discussion of The Causes Which Gave Rise to It and The Social and Political Issues Emanating From It by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book The Rise and Fall of Anarchy in America From its Incipient Stage to the First Bomb Thrown in Chicago by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book The Boy Fortune Hunters in Alaska by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book Jesus, The Messiah; or, the Old Testament Prophecies Fulfilled in the New Testament Scriptures by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book The Poems of Sappho by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book The Secret of Charlotte Brontë: Followed by Remiiscences of the Real Monsieur and Madame Heger by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book How to Tell a Story and Others by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book The Gnomes of the Saline Mountains: A Fantastic Narrative by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book A History of Sanskrit Literature by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book Home Life in Colonial Days by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
Cover of the book Old Indian Days by Ossip Schubin (Aloisia Kirschner)
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy