For just as those trained in the canons of the lyre declare the sesquialter proportion produces the symphony diapente, the double proportion the diapason, the sesquiterte the diatessaron, the slowest of all, so the specialists in Bacchic harmonies have detected three accords between wine and water — Diapente. From Wordnik.com. [Essays and Miscellanies] Reference
Nicholas in so unexpected a manner was the grand topic of the evening; and the four musical gentlemen, hearing the story in turn from each of the others, were now engaged in a sort of diatessaron, in which the four accounts were made to harmonize with considerable difficulty: Mr. Schmauker insisting upon his view, that Nicholas had arrived wet and hungry, was found on the doorstep, and dragged in by Mr.. Starkey; while. From Wordnik.com. [The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 15, No. 87, January, 1865] Reference
By reading the gospels as a diatessaron, what the individual writers attempted to communicate is confused and lost. From Wordnik.com. [Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]] Reference
It was then tried with speaking: the result was the same: a powerful and perpetual hum, not resonant peculiarly to the diatessaron, the diapente, or the diapason, but making a new variety of continuous fundamental bass. From Wordnik.com. [Gryll Grange] Reference
In the Psalter he was content with copying out the first verse of each psalm; whilst when dealing with the Gospels he did not quote from each evangelist separately, but made use of a kind of confused diatessaron of all four combined. From Wordnik.com. [The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne] Reference
This order also keeps the analogy of the symphonies, i.e. the proportion of the irascible to the rational (which is placed as hypate) making the diatessaron (or fourth), that of the irascible to the concupiscent (or nete) making the diapente (or fifth), and that of the rational to the concupiscent (as hypate to nete) making an octave or diapason. From Wordnik.com. [Essays and Miscellanies] Reference
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