Page:The story of the flute (IA storyofflute1914fitz).djvu/23

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The
Story of the Flute.

CHAPTER I.

Flutes of the Ancients.[1]

Antiquity of the flute—Classic legends—Egyptian origin—The Arab "Nay"—Development—The Fipple—Fingerholes—Double flutes—Popularity amongst the Ancients—Ancient players of note—Their position and costume.

It is often asserted that the flute is the oldest of all musical instruments: in one sense this is true; in another it is not accurate. It would seem that all the world over a pipe of some sort was theAntiquity
of the
Flute
earliest form of musical instrument (the primitive drum can hardly be so termed), and preceded the invention of any kind of stringed instrument; but what we now call a flute—i.e., a tube held parallel to the lips and blown through a hole in the upper side—is in all probability of comparatively modern origin. The term "flute" was
1
1
  1. Save where otherwise stated, the "flutes" referred to in Chaps. I. and II. were vertical pipes, and not transverse or side-blown flutes in the modern sense.