Movements
- Introduction
- The Song of David, the Shepherd
- Psalm: All Praise to Him
- Song of Victory
- March
- Psalm: In the Lord I Put my Faith
- Psalm: O Had I Wings Like a Dove
- Song of the Prophets
- Have Mercy on Me, my Lord
- Saul's Camp
- Psalm: God, the Lord Shall Be my Light
- Incantation
- March of the Philistines
- The Lamentations of Gilboa
- Festival Song (Song of the Daughters of Israel)
- The Dance before the Ark
- Song, Now my Voice in Song Upsoaring
- Song of the Handmaid
- Psalm of Penitence
- Psalm; Behold, in Evil I Was Born
- Psalm: O Shall I Raise mine Eyes unto the Mountains?
- The Song of Ephraim
- March of the Hebrews
- Psalm: In my Distress
- Psalm: In this Terror, the Great God which I Adore
- The Coronation of Solomon
- The Death of David
Read more about this topic: Le Roi David
Famous quotes containing the word movements:
“In a universe that is all gradations of matter, from gross to fine to finer, so that we end up with everything we are composed of in a lattice, a grid, a mesh, a mist, where particles or movements so small we cannot observe them are held in a strict and accurate web, that is nevertheless nonexistent to the eyes we use for ordinary livingin this system of fine and finer, where then is the substance of a thought?”
—Doris Lessing (b. 1919)
“Awareness of the stars and their light pervades the Koran, which reflects the brightness of the heavenly bodies in many verses. The blossoming of mathematics and astronomy was a natural consequence of this awareness. Understanding the cosmos and the movements of the stars means understanding the marvels created by Allah. There would be no persecuted Galileo in Islam, because Islam, unlike Christianity, did not force people to believe in a fixed heaven.”
—Fatima Mernissi, Moroccan sociologist. Islam and Democracy, ch. 9, Addison-Wesley Publishing Co. (Trans. 1992)
“The novel is not a crazy quilt of bits; it is a logical sequence of psychological events: the movements of stars may seem crazy to the simpleton, but wise men know the comets come back.”
—Vladimir Nabokov (18991977)