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uncopied, and yet the Conservatorios or musical schools, the Operas, or the Ora- torios, have scarce been mentioned; and though every library is crowded with histories of painting and other arts, as well as with the lives of their most illustrious professors, music and musicians have been utterly neglected. And this is still the more unaccountable, as no one of the liberal arts is at present so much culti- vated, and encouraged, nor can the Ita- lians now boast a superiority over the rest of Europe in any of them so much as in music; for few of their painters, sculp- tors, architects, historians, poets, or phi- losophers of the present age, as in some centuries past, so greatly surpass their cotemporaries on this side the Alps, as to excite much curiosity to visit or converse with them.
But music still lives in Italy, while most of the other arts only speak a dead language; classical and learned indeed, but less pleasing and profitable to stu-
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