the Polonaise of the 3rd of May, adapted to words
relative to the promulgation of the famous constitution
of the 3rd of May, 1791; the Kosciuszko Polonaise,
with words adapted to already existing music, dedicated
to the great patriot and general when, in 1792, the
nation rose in defence of the constitution; the Oginski
Polonaise, also called the Swan’s song and the
Partition of Poland, a composition without words,
of the year 1793 (at the time of the second partition),
by Prince Michael Cleophas Oginski. Among the
Polish composers of the second half of the last century
and the beginning of the present whose polonaises
enjoyed in their day, and partly enjoy still, a high
reputation, are especially notable Kozlowski, Kamienski,
Elsner, Deszczynski, Bracicki, Wanski, Prince Oginski,
Kurpinski, and Dobrzynski. Outside Poland the
polonaise, both as an instrumental and vocal composition,
both as an independent piece and part of larger works,
had during the same period quite an extraordinary
popularity. Whether we examine the productions
of the classics or those of the inferior virtuosic
and drawing-room composers, [footnote: I
should have added “operatic composers.”]
everywhere we find specimens of the polonaise.
Pre-eminence among the most successful foreign cultivators
of this Polish dance has, however, been accorded to
Spohr and Weber. I said just now “this dance,”
but, strictly speaking, the polonaise, which has been
called a marche dansante, is not so much a dance as
a figured walk, or procession, full of gravity and
a certain courtly etiquette. As to the music of
the polonaise, it is in 3/4 time, and of a moderate
movement (rather slow than quick). The flowing
and more or less florid melody has rhythmically a
tendency to lean on the second crotchet and even on
the second quaver of the bar (see illustration No.
1, a and b), and generally concludes each of its parts
with one of certain stereotyped formulas of a similar
rhythmical cast (see illustration No. 2, a, b, c,
and d). The usual accompaniment consists of a
bass note at the beginning of the bar followed, except
at the cadences, by five quavers, of which the first
may be divided into semiquavers. Chopin, however,
emancipated himself more and more from these conventionalities
in his later poetic polonaises.
[Two music score excerpts here, labeled No. 1 and No. 2]
The polonaise [writes Brodzinski] is the only dance which suits mature age, and is not unbecoming to persons of elevated rank; it is the dance of kings, heroes, and even old men; it alone suits the martial dress. It does not breathe any passion, but seems to be only a triumphal march, an expression of chivalrous and polite manners. A solemn gravity presides always at the polonaise, which, perhaps, alone recalls neither the fire of primitive manners nor the gallantry of more civilised but more enervated ages. Besides these principal characteristics, the polonaise bears a singularly national and historical