we must not too rashly conclude that these wealthy
noblemen were all animated by artistic enthusiasm.
Ostentatiousness had, I am afraid, more to do with
it than love of art for art’s sake. Music
was simply one of the indispensable departments of
their establishments, in the splendour and vastness
of which they tried to outdo each other and vie with
sovereign rulers. The promiscuous enumeration
of musicians, cooks, footmen, &c., in the lady’s
description of a nobleman’s court which I referred
to in the proem, is in this respect very characteristic.
Towards the middle of the last century Prince Sanguszko,
who lived at Dubno, in Volhynia, had in his service
no less than two bands, to which was sometimes joined
a third belonging to Prince Lubomirski. But, it
will be asked, what music did they play? An author
of Memoirs of the reign of Augustus III tells us that,
according to the Polish fashion, they had during meal-times
to play national airs, polonaises, mazurkas, &c.,
arranged for wind-instruments, with or without violins.
For special occasions the Prince got a new kind of
music, then much in favour—viz., a band
of mountaineers playing on flutes and drums.
And while the guests were sitting at the banquet,
horns, trumpets, and fifes sounded fanfares. Besides
the ordinary and extraordinary bands, this exalted
personage had among his musical retainers a drummer
who performed solos on his instrument. One is
glad to learn that when the Prince was alone or had
little company, he took delight in listening to trios
for two violins and bass, it being then the fashion
to play such ensemble pieces. Count Ilinski,
the father of the composer John Stanislas Ilinski,
engaged for his private theatre two companies, one
from Germany and one from Italy. The persons employed
in the musical department of his household numbered
124. The principal band, conducted by Dobrzyrnski
pere, a good violinist and conductor, consisted of
four violins, one viola, one violoncello, one double
bass, one flute, one oboe, one clarinet, and one bassoon.
Villagers were trained by these players to assist them.
Then there was yet another band, one of wind instruments,
under the direction of Karelli, a pupil of the Russian
composer Bartnianski [Footnote: The Russian Palestrina,
whose name is oftener met with in the forms of Bortnianski
and Bortniansky]. The chorus was composed of
twenty four voices, picked from the young people on
Count Ilinski’s estates. However questionable
the taste of many of these noble art patrons may have
been, there were not wanting some who cultivated music
with a purer spirit. Some of the best bands were
those of the Princes D. Radziwill, Adam Czartoryski,
F. Sulkowski, Michael Lubomirski, Counts Ilinski,
Oginski, and Wielhorski. Our inquiry into the
cultivation of music at the courts of the Polish magnates
has carried us beyond the point we had reached in
our historical survey. Let us now retrace our
steps.