Am 04.05.2014 01:49, schrieb Pierre Perol-Schneider:
2014-05-04 1:38 GMT+02:00 Martin Tarenskeen <address@hidden>:
On Sat, 3 May 2014, Urs Liska wrote:
> > > There is just one important thing that I couldn't read in
Schumann's
handwriting. It's overstroken by Schumann and in that typical 19th
century German handwriting. But maybe someone in this group is
able > > > to
read it. See attachment.
Maybe something like "Für ganz Kleine:"?
Would make sense in the context of op. 68, but I really can't read the
last
word.
I like that one. Until someone comes up with a better idea I'll use that
one.
I have attached the tune (.pdf and .ly).
Thanks Martin.
I'm pretty sure that the last letter is an "r"... I've tried to clean your
image, see enclosed.
The second-to-last is most probably an "n" - compare with the second-to-last
character of the second word.
Then we have a clear "i" dot before that.
With the "r" I'm not 100% sure - although I admit this looks quite convincing.
The "r" in "Für" has a first stroke that is more distinct than in that last
character.
Believe it or not, I can well imagine that the last and the fourth-to-last characters are
both "e"s.
I'd like to know what that stroke above/between the first two characters of the
last word is. Just an arbitrary stroke? Or an apostrophe separating a letter
and a word?
Urs
Cheers,
Pierre
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