the walls of the park, built of rough-hewn stone,
begin. These stones, set in a mortar made of reddish
earth, display their variegated colors, the warm yellows
of the silex, the white of the lime carbonates, the
russet browns of the sandstone, in many a fantastic
shape. As you first enter it, the park is gloomy,
the walls are hidden by creeping plants and by trees
that for fifty years have heard no sound of axe.
One might think it a virgin forest, made primeval
again through some phenomenon granted exclusively to
forests. The trunks of the trees are swathed
with lichen which hangs from one to another.
Mistletoe, with its viscid leaves, droops from every
fork of the branches where moisture settles.
I have found gigantic ivies, wild arabesques which
flourish only at fifty leagues from Paris, here where
land does not cost enough to make one sparing of it.
The landscape on such free lines covers a great deal
of ground. Nothing is smoothed off; rakes are
unknown, ruts and ditches are full of water, frogs
are tranquilly delivered of their tadpoles, the woodland
flowers bloom, and the heather is as beautiful as
that I have seen on your mantle-shelf in January in
the elegant beau-pot sent by Florine. This mystery
is intoxicating, it inspires vague desires. The
forest odors, beloved of souls that are epicures of
poesy, who delight in the tiny mosses, the noxious
fungi, the moist mould, the willows, the balsams, the
wild thyme, the green waters of a pond, the golden
star of the yellow water-lily,—the breath
of all such vigorous propagations came to my nostrils
and filled me with a single thought; was it their soul?
I seemed to see a rose-tinted gown floating along
the winding alley.
The path ended abruptly in another copse, where birches
and poplars and all the quivering trees palpitated,—an
intelligent family with graceful branches and elegant
bearing, the trees of a love as free! It was
from this point, my dear fellow, that I saw a pond
covered with the white water-lily and other plants
with broad flat leaves and narrow slender ones, on
which lay a boat painted white and black, as light
as a nut-shell and dainty as the wherry of a Seine
boatman. Beyond rose the chateau, built in 1560,
of fine red brick, with stone courses and copings,
and window-frames in which the sashes were of small
leaded panes (O Versailles!). The stone is hewn
in diamond points, but hollowed, as in the Ducal Palace
at Venice on the facade toward the Bridge of Sighs.
There are no regular lines about the castle except
in the centre building, from which projects a stately
portico with double flights of curving steps, and round
balusters slender at their base and broadening at
the middle. The main building is surrounded by
clock-towers and sundry modern turrets, with galleries
and vases more or less Greek. No harmony there,
my dear Nathan! These heterogeneous erections
are wrapped, so to speak, by various evergreen trees
whose branches shed their brown needles upon the roofs,