THE PRINCESS. Not at all. Watch but the great one yonder! There's the Duke ; Those gill-marks mean his Order of St. Luke; Those old skin-stains his boasted quarterings. Look what a swirl and roll of tide he brings; Have you not marked him thus, with crest in air, You surely have, DENISE. DENISE. I think I have. But there's another, older and more grave,— The one that wears the round patch on the throat, THE PRINCESS. Why that's my good chambellan—with his seal. Equips my sweet-pouch, brings me morning flowers, DENISE. Look, Madam, look !—a fish without a stain ! O speckless, fleckless fish! Who is it, pray, THE PRINCESS. FONTENAY. You know him not? My prince of shining locks! DENISE. Ai! what a splash! Who is it comes with such a sudden dash Plump i' the midst, and leaps the others clear? THE PRINCESS. Ho! for a trumpet! Let the bells be rung! Got in a brawl that stands for Spanish war:-- DENISE. I'd rather wear E'en such a patched and melancholy air, As his, that motley one,—who keeps the wall, THE PRINCESS. My frankest wooer! Thus his love he tells DENISE. "He loves?-he loves?" Why all this loving 's naught ! THE PRINCESS. And "Naught (quoth JACQUOT) makes the sum of Love!" DENISE. The cynic knave! How call you this one here ?— And circles, like a cat around a cage, To snatch the surplus. THE PRINCESS. CHERUBIN, the page. 'Tis but a child, yet with that roguish smile, And those sly looks, the child will make hearts ache DENISE. And these that swim aside-who may these be? THE PRINCESS. Those are two gentlemen of Picardy, Equal in blood,―of equal bravery:— D'AURELLES and MAUFRIGNAC. They hunt in pair; I mete them morsels with an equal care, Those are the crowd who merely think their lot The lighter by my land. More prized than most? DENISE. And is there none THE PRINCESS. Ah me -he will not come ! He swims at large,-looks shyly on,-is dumb. To gain a something more. But though he's brave, And then-he's modest! So . . . he will not come ! |