122 Handel and Music own child when it was all the time begotten of a barrel organ. It is a wise tune that knows its own father and I like my music to be the legitimate offspring of respectable parents. Roughly, however, as I have said over and over again, if I think some- thing that I know and greatly like in music, no matter whose, is appropriate, I appropriate it. I should say I was under most obligations to Handel, Purcell and Beethoven. For example, any one who looked at my song "Man in Vain " in Ulysses might think it was taken from " Batti, batti." I should like to say it was taken from, or suggested by, a few bars in the opening of Beethoven's pianoforte sonata op. 78, and a few bars in the accompaniment to the duet " Hark how the Songsters " in Purcell's Timon of Athens. I am not aware of having borrowed more in the song than what follows as natural development of these two passages which run thus : Beethoven From the pianoforte arrangement in The Beauties of Purcell by John Clarke, Mus. Doc. Honesty Honesty consists not in never stealing but in knowing where to stop in stealing, and how to make good use of what one does steal. It is only great proprietors who can steal well and wisely. A good stealer, a good user of what he takes,