and a number of successful concerts were given.
The chief promoters seem to have been Count Krasinski
and the two Prussian officials Mosqua and E. Th.
A. Hoffmann. In the last named the reader will
recognise the famous author of fantastic tales and
of no less fantastic musical criticisms, the conductor
and composer of operas and other works, &c. According
to his biographer, J. E. Hitzig, Hoffmann did not take
much interest in the proceedings of the Musical Ressource
(that was the name of the society) till it bought
the Mniszech Palace, a large building, which, having
been damaged by fire, had to undergo extensive repairs.
Then, indeed, he set to work with a will, planned
the arrangement and fitting-up of the rooms, designed
and partly painted the decorations—not without
freely indulging his disposition for caricature—and
when all was ready, on August 3, 1806 (the King of
Prussia’s birthday), conducted the first concert
in the splendid new hall. The activity of the
society was great, and must have been beneficial; for
we read that they had every Sunday performances of
quartets and other kinds of chamber music, that ladies
frequently came forward with pianoforte sonatas, and
that when the celebrated violinist Moser, of Berlin,
visited Warsaw, he made them acquainted with the finest
quartets of Mozart and Haydn. Still, I should
not have dwelt so long on the doings of the Musical
Ressource were it not that it was the germ of, or
at least gave the impulse to, even more influential
associations and institutions that were subsequently
founded with a view to the wider diffusion and better
cultivation of the musical art in Poland. After
the battle of Jena the French were not long in making
their appearance in Warsaw, whereby an end was put
to Prussia’s rule there, and her officials were
sent about, or rather sent out of, their business.
Thus the Musical Ressource lost many of its members,
Hoffmann and Mosqua among others. Still, it survived,
and was reconstructed with more national elements.
In Frederick Augustus of Saxony’s reign it is
said to have been transformed into a school of singing.
The year 1815 brought into existence two musical institutions
that deserve to be noticed—society for the
cultivation of church music, which met at the College
of the Pianists, and had at its head Count Zabiello
as president and Elsner as conductor; and an association,
organised by the last-named musician, and presided
over by the Princess Sophia Zamoyska, which aimed at
the advancement of the musical art in Poland, and
provided for the education of music teachers for schools,
organists for churches, and singers for the stage.
Although I try to do my best with the unsatisfactory
and often contradictory newspaper reports and dictionary
articles from which I have to draw my data, I cannot
vouch for the literal correctness of my notes.
In making use of Sowinski’s work I am constantly
reminded of Voltaire’s definition of dictionaries:
“Immenses archives de mensonges et d’un