              Copyright
Helen Forder
2004
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The
National Music of Wales ... continued xxxxxxxxxxxxxxpage 2
John
Thomas (Pencerdd Gwalia). From Y Cymmrodor, 1878 |
| With regard to the
source whence Britain derived her music and
musical instruments, there appears very little
doubt but that they were brought from the East,
either by the inhabitants, in their original
migration, or by the Phoenicians, who, as is well
known, had commercial intercourse with Britain
from the earliest times. |
 |
| The Greeks
are said to have derived their music, with other
arts and sciences, from Cadmus, a Phoenician, and
from Cecrops, an Egyptian, who settled in Greece
about two thousand years before the Christian
era. Consequently, as I have already suggested,
if we did not bring our music and musical
instruments with us, in our original migration
from the East, in all probability, we are
indebted for them to the Phoenicians, who were of
Hebrew origin - and were supposed to be none
others than the Canaanites. |
| It is a
remarkable circumstance, in support of this
supposition, that the Welsh word Telynu, "to
play upon the harp", is said to signify
precisely the same in the Phoenician language.
This might go far to account for the harp of
David being our national instrument. |
| The harp,
of all instruments, is the one which has been
held in the most general esteem, and has for ages
been the inseparable companion of prophet, king,
bard and minstrel. From the days of Jubal -
"the father of all such as handle the harp
and organ" - it may be traced through all
generations as holding the highest place among
the Israelites, as is testified by the Holy
Scriptures. For example, Laban reproaches Jacob,
his son-in-law, in the following words:- |
"Wherefore
didst thou flee away secretly, and steal away
from me? and didst not tell me, that I might
have sent thee away with mirth and with
songs, with tabret and with harp."
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| Samuel, in
his instructions to Saul, after having secretly
anointed him king, says: |
"And it shall
come to pass, when thou art come thither to
the city (Bethel), that thou shalt meet a
company of prophets coming down from the high
place with a psaltery, and a tabret, and a
pipe, and a harp before them."
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