Down far in the avenue she could hear a streetorgan playing.
2
Any one who can turn a crank can manage a streetorgan.
3
One day came a streetorgan, accompanied by singing, and how glad I was!
4
As he did so, a streetorgan began to play in front of a public-house close by.
5
A streetorgan can do that.
6
Music, if it were but a streetorgan, always stirred her heart and made her eager for the joy of song.
7
He heard the maids whispering together on the stairs in Kensington Square, and the sound of the streetorgan in the frost.
8
The arrangements of a streetorgan being entirely automatic, any one who can turn a crank can manage one of these instruments.
9
Life of Dante: An Italian; the first to introduce the banana and the class of streetorgan known as "Dante's Inferno."
10
And for myself, although I am past my sportive days, the sound of a streetorgan, if any, would inflame me to a fox-trot.
11
About six o'clock, exhausted in mind and body, he had allowed his attention to stray, when the sudden clang of a streetorgan startled him.
12
Perhaps you like streetorgans, too?
13
They played fragments of the best known pieces, and sang songs from operas long since fallen into disuse even on streetorgans.
14
Reverenced, then, be all streetorgans; more melody is at the beck of my Italian boy, than lurks in squadrons of Parisian orchestras.
15
But Cousins also finds time to walk us through such underappreciated films as Dorota Kedzierzawska's Crows and Kira Muratova's Melody for a StreetOrgan.
16
A participant in The StreetOrgan Festival doffs his hat during the annual Victorian week at Llandrindod Wells, Powys, Wales August 29, 2009.