Or, to wean you from the vapours; You are worth the love they give you, Or a younger grace shall please; "Belle Marquise!". Till your frothed-out life's commotion Settles down to Ennui's ocean, Or a dainty sham devotion, "Belle Marquise ! " V. No we neither like nor love you, "Belle Marquise !" Lesser lights we place above you, — Giving grace not all the praise; And, en partant, Arsinoé, – Without malice whatsoever, We shall counsel to our Chloë To be rather good than clever; For we find it hard to smother Just one little thought, Marquise! Wittier perhaps than any other, You were neither Wife nor Mother, "Belle Marquise!" THE STORY OF ROSINA. AN INCIDENT IN THE LIFE OF FRANÇOIS BOUCHER. "On ne badine pas avec l'amour." THE scene, a wood. creeping, A shepherd tip-toe Carries a basket, whence a billet peeps, To lay beside a silk-clad Oread sleeping Under an urn; yet not so sound she sleeps But that she plainly sees his graceful act ; "He thinks she thinks he thinks she sleeps," in fact. One hardly needs the "Peint par François Boucher." one sees All the sham life comes back again, That ruled the hour when Louis Quinze was king. For these were yet the days of halcyon weather,A" Martin's summer", when the nation swam, Aimless and easy as a wayward feather, Down the full tide of jest and epigram; A careless time, when France's bluest blood Beat to the tune of "After us the flood." Plain Roland still was placidly "inspecting," And far afield were sun-baked savage creatures, Female and male, that tilled the earth, and wrung Want from the soil;-lean things with livid features, Shape of bent man, and voice that never sung: These were the Ants, for yet to Jacques Bonhomme Tumbrils were not, nor any sound of drum. But Boucher was a Grasshopper, and painted, - sainted, Swayed the light realm of ballets and bon mots; Ruled the dim boudoir's demi-jour, or drove grove. A laughing Dame, who sailed a laughing cargo. Of flippant loves along the Fleuve du Tendre; Whose greatest grace was jupes à la Camargo, Whose gentlest merit gentiment se rendre ; — Queen of the rouge-cheeked Hours, whose footsteps fell To Rameau's notes, in dances by Gardel; — Her Boucher served, till Nature's self betraying, As Wordsworth sings, the heart that loved her not, Made of his work a land of languid Maying, Filled with false gods and muses misbegot; A Versailles Eden of cosmetic youth, Wherein most things went naked, save the Truth. Once, only once, — perhaps the last night's revels Palled in the after-taste, our Boucher sighed For that first beauty, falsely named the Devil's, Young-lipped, unlessoned, joyous, and cleareyed; Flung down his palette like a weary man, And sauntered slowly through the Rue SainteAnne. Wherefore, we know not; but, at times, far nearer Things common come, and lineaments half-seen Grow in a moment magically clearer ; Perhaps, as he walked, the grass he called "too green" |