I do not think that on this earth, | |
Mid its most notable plantations, | |
Has been a spot more praised, more famed, | |
More choice, more cited, oftener named, | |
Than thy most tedious park, Versailles! | |
O gods! O shepherds! rocky vales! | |
O sulky Termes, satyrs old! | |
O pleasing scenes! O charming views! | |
Sweet landscape, where one may behold, | |
Ranged onion-wise, the little yews; | |
O quincunx! fountain, bowling-green, | |
Where every summer Sabbath-e’en, | |
On pleasure bent, one yawning sees | |
So many honest families. | |
And ye, imperial Roman shades! | |
Ye naiads, pale and stony maids, | |
Holding your hands outstretched to all | |
And shivering in your waterfall! | |
Stiles, modelled in obliging bushes; | |
Ye formal groves, wherein the thrushes | |
Seek plaintively their native cry; | |
Ye water-gods, who vainly try | |
Beneath your fountains to be dry; | |
Ye chestnut-trees, be not afraid | |
That I shall vex your ancient shade, | |
Knowing that at sundry times | |
I have perpetrated rhymes: | |
No such ruthless thought is mine. | |
No! I swear it by Apollo, | |
I swear it by the sacred Nine, | |
By nymphs within their basins hollow, | |
Who softly on three flints recline, | |
By yon old faun, quaint dancing-master, | |
Who trips it on the sward in plaster, | |
By thee thyself, august abode, | |
Who know’st save Art no other guest, | |
I swear by Neptune, watery god, | |
My verses shall not break your rest! | |
I know too well what is the matter; | |
The god of song has plagued you sore; | |
The poets, with their ceaseless chatter, | |
You brood in mournful silence o’er; | |
So many madrigals and odes, | |
Songs, ballads, sonnets, and epodes, | |
In which your wonders have been sung | |
Your tired ears have sadly wrung, | |
Until you slumber to the chimes | |
Of these interminable rhymes. | |
|
Amid these haunts where dwells ennui | |
For mere conformity I slept, | |
Or ’t was not sleep that o’er me crept, | |
If, dreaming, one awake may be. | |
O, say, my friend, do you recall | |
Three marble steps, of rosy hue, | |
Upon your way toward the lake, | |
When that delicious path you take | |
That leads the orangery through, | |
Left-turning from the palace wall? | |
I would wager it was here | |
Came the monarch without peer, | |
In the sunset, red and clear, | |
Down the forest dim to see | |
Day take flight and disappear,— | |
If the day could so forget | |
What was due to etiquette. | |
But what pretty steps are those! | |
Cursed be the foot, said we, | |
That would stain their tints of rose,— | |
Say, do you remember yet? | |
|
With what soft shades is clouded o’er | |
This defaced and broken floor! | |
See the veins of azure deep | |
Through the paler rose-tints creep; | |
Trace the slender, branching line | |
In the marble, pure and fine; | |
So through huntress Dian’s breast | |
White and firm as Alpine snows, | |
The celestial ichor flows; | |
Such the hand, and still more cold, | |
Led me leashed in days of old. | |
Don’t confound these steps so rare | |
With that other staircase where | |
The monarch grand, who could not wait, | |
Waited on Condé, stair by stair, | |
When he came with weary gait, | |
War-worn and victorious there. | |
Near a marble vase are these, | |
Of graceful shape and white as snow, | |
Whether ’tis Classic or Chinese, | |
Antique or modern, others know. | |
I leave the question in their hands; | |
It is not Gothic, I can swear; | |
Much I like it where it stands, | |
Worthy vase, and neighbour kind, | |
And to think it I ’m inclined | |
Cousin to my rosy stair, | |
Guarding it with jealous care. | |
O, to see in such small space | |
So much beauty, so much grace! | |
|
Lovely staircase, tell us true, | |
How many princes, prelates proud, | |
Kings, marquises,—a pompous crowd,— | |
And ladies fair, have swept o’er you? | |
Ah, these last, as I should guess, | |
Did not vex thee with their state, | |
Nor didst thou groan beneath the weight | |
Of ermine cloak or velvet dress: | |
Tell us of that ambitious band | |
Whose dainty footstep lightest fell; | |
Was it the regal Montespan? | |
Hortense, a novel in her hand? | |
De Maintenon, with beads to tell? | |
Or gay Fontanges, with knot and fan? | |
Didst ever look on La Vallière? | |
And tell us, marble, if you can, | |
Which of the twain you thought most fair— | |
De Parabère or De Sabran? | |
’Twixt Sabran and De Parabère | |
The very Regent could not choose | |
When supper did his wits confuse. | |
Didst ever see the great Voltaire, | |
Who waged such war on superstition, | |
Who to defy the Christ did dare; | |
He, who aspired to the position | |
Of sexton to Cytherea’s fane, | |
When to the Pompadour he brought | |
His compliments, and fulsome strain, | |
The holy water of the court. | |
Hast beheld the plump Dubarry | |
Accoutred like a country lass, | |
Sipping milk, beside thee tarry, | |
Or tripping barefoot through the grass? | |
|
Stones who know our country’s story, | |
What a variegated throng | |
In your bygone days of glory | |
Down your steps have swept along! | |
The gay world lounged beneath these trees, | |
Lords and lackeys drank the breeze; | |
There was every sort of cattle; | |
O the duchesses! the tattle, | |
O the brave red heels that dangled | |
Round the ladies, flounced and spangled! | |
O the gossip! O the sighs! | |
O the flash of brilliant eyes! | |
O the feathers! O the stoles! | |
O the powder on their polls! | |
O the furbelows and breeches | |
Underneath those spreading beeches! | |
How many folk—not counting fools— | |
By the ancient fountain-pools! | |
Ah! it was the good old time | |
Of the periwig sublime; | |
Lives the cockney who dares grudge | |
One iota of its state, | |
He deserves, as I adjudge, | |
On his thick plebeian pate | |
Now and evermore to wear | |
Other ornament than hair. | |
Century of mocking wood, | |
Age of powder and of paste, | |
He who does not find thee good | |
Writes himself devoid of taste, | |
Lacking sentiment, and stupid, | |
Votary abhorred by Cupid. | |
Rosy marble, is ’t not so? | |
Yet, despite myself, I trow | |
Though here thy fate is fixed by chance, | |
Other destiny was thine; | |
Far away from cloudy France, | |
Where a warmer sun doth shine, | |
Near some temple, Greek or Latin, | |
The fair daughters of the clime | |
With the scent of heath and thyme | |
Clinging to their sandalled feet, | |
Treading thee in rhythmic dance, | |
Were a burden far more sweet | |
Than court-ladies, shod with satin. | |
Could it be for this alone | |
Nature formed thee in the earth, | |
In whose beauteous, virgin stone | |
Genius might have wrought a birth | |
Every age had joyed to own? | |
When with trowel and with spade | |
In this muddy, modern park | |
Thou in solemn state wert laid, | |
Then the outraged gods might mark | |
What the times had brought about,— | |
Mansard, in his triumph, flout | |
Praxiteles’ injured shade | |
There should have come forth of thee | |
Some new-born divinity. | |
When the marble-cutters hewed | |
Through thy noble block their way, | |
They broke in, with footsteps rude, | |
Where a Venus sleeping lay; | |
And the goddess’ wounded veins | |
Coloured thee with roseate stains. |
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