In this room, we feel the breath of history. On the ceiling and part of the walls, you can see what the restorers found after removing all the layers of Soviet paint that covered the painting. A magnificent ceiling was revealed, in which complexly shaped accents are arranged. Rosettes in the center, and in the corners there are also bright classicist accents of solid, blue color. In the four corners we can see a composition depicting Hermes motifs. The walls are decorated with a frieze strip on the ceiling, pilasters in the corners, a plinth on the window sills, and the walls are patterned imitating the luxurious illusion that they were wallpapered or draped. We can even trace the beautiful Roman columns. Above the doors are landscape compositions. This was one of the prestigious rooms of the palace – the gentlemen's dining room. Only in the second half of the 19th century did the Žurauskis peel off and sell the beautiful parquet that was here. And the last owner of the manor, Adomas Vilėniškis, had allowed people to pray in Adomynė before he built the church - a chapel was installed here.
The room was heated by a beautiful stove made of large glazed white bricks, decorated with a plaster "crown". The decorations crumbled, the remains are stored in the Kupiškis Ethnographic Museum, and restorers cast new ones based on them. It is interesting that the authentic metal front door and the so-called "juška" have survived unworn.
History also looks from the picture hanging on the wall: we see how the manor was "lived in" by the Soviets, in the 1960s and 1970s. Fallen shutters, dilapidated porches, stairs to the veranda above the brick arcade have been installed, a door to a furnished apartment has been cut into the wall, and a barn has been built between the white semicircular arches, and a barn for animals has been built in the basement...
On the opposite walls, facing each other, are portraits of the Vilėniškių family. The last owner of the manor, Adomas, proudly sitting with a book in his hands among flowers at the already seen preserved table on the cozy veranda, and his nephew, priest canon Juozapas, celebrating his priesthood anniversary and adorned with a wreath of oak leaves with a pure white lily on his head. They both left us their name and a house of prayer.
