Versailles (Petit Trianon)

by ADRIENNE CECILE RICH
MERELY the landscape of a vanished whim,
An artifice that lasts beyond the wish:
The grotto by the pond, the gulping fish
That round and round pretended islands swim,
The creamery abandoned to its doves,
The empty shrine the guidebook says is love’s.
What wind can bleaken this, what weather chasten
The balustrades of stone, the sky stone-pale?
A fountain triton idly soaks his tail
In the last puddle of a drying basin;
A leisure that no human will can hasten
Drips from the hollow of his lifted shell.
When we were younger gardens were for games,
But now upon the sun-gilt lawn of kings
We drift, consulting catalogues for names
Of postured gods: the cry of closing rings
For us and for the couples in the wood,
And all good children who are all too good.
O children, next year, children, you will play
With only half your hearts: be wild today.
And lovers, take one long and fast embrace
Before the sun that tarnished queens goes down,
And evening finds you in a restless town
Where each has back his old restricted face.