An Antique

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Mildewed and gray the marble stairs
  Rise from their balustraded urns
  To where a chiseled satyr glares
  From a luxuriant bed of ferns;

  A pebbled walk that labyrinths
  'Twixt parallels of verdant box
  To where, broad-based on grotesque plinths,
  'Mid cushions of moss-padded rocks,

  Rises a ruined pleasure-house,
  Of shattered column, broken dome,
  Where, reveling in thick carouse,
  The buoyant ivy makes its home.

  And here from bank, and there from bed,
  Down the mad rillet's jubilant lymph,
  The lavish violet's odors shed
  In breathings of a fountain nymph.

  And where, in lichened hoariness,
  The broken marble dial-plate
  Basks in the Summer's sultriness,
  Rich houri roses palpitate.

  Voluptuous, languid with perfumes,
  As were the beauties that of old,
  In damask satins, jeweled plumes,
  With powdered gallants here that strolled.

  When slender rapiers, proud with gems,
  Sneered at the sun their haughty hues,
  And Touchstone wit and apothegms
  Laughed down the long, cool avenues.

  Two pleated bowers of woodbine pave,
  'Neath all their heaviness of musk,
  Two fountains of pellucid wave,
  With sunlight-tessellated dusk.

  Beholding these, I seem to feel
  An exodus of earthly sight,
  An influx of ecstatic weal
  Poured thro' my eyes in jets of light.

  And so I see the fountains twain
  Of hate and love in Arden there;
  The time of regal Charlemagne,
  Of Roland and of Oliver.

  Rinaldo of Montalban's towers
  Sleeps by the spring of hate; above
  Bows, spilling all his face with flowers,
  Angelica, who quaffed of love.

© Madison Julius Cawein