Authors: Jane Urquhart
He levels the hill.
During his morning promenade the attending crowd is thin, the atmosphere informal. They chat and giggle in his presence. No one discusses glory or divine right, and the girls turn their eyes to younger men.
He cuts into cliffs, expands the castle. There is an army draining the enormous outlying swamp. Soldiers in their hundreds die of diseases connected to unhealthy soil. The engineers bring water to the fountains at his palaces.
He builds four hundred fountains down through the vista where the hill used to be.
He dismantles, builds four hundred more.
Two thousand oak trees are brought in from the forests of the Jura. Half die in the process of transplantation. They are replaced with healthy giants. Well-ordered forests appear where once the cliffs used to be. But now they present a barrier to his view from the west and east rooms of the palace. A throbbing begins in his temples. The forests disappear. The are replaced by artificial lakes. Hundreds of guests float in imported gondolas.
He demands and receives a large cascade where each of his mistresses is represented in stone as either a goddess or a water nymph. More forests appear where once there was only mud and toads. These he sees from his bedrooms, though they are five miles away!
He has broken the intimacy of rock and swamp wide open.
Now he feels much better.
Sleep.
These are deceptive spaces
windows bronze
a cold stone warms
I’m trying to connect
the break in the horizon
moving distance after distance
there are canals
thin as gold leaf
and dreams of fountains
collapsing at the edge
trees that tremble
just beyond my hand
are miles and miles away
the oval mirror of the lake
impossible to reach
I am trying to move
distance after distance
turning back at dusk
my declaration of withdrawal
I see the garden
as near to me
and as far away
The Poisoned Shirt
A third chamber, as it were the anteroom of the above, is correctly named the decaying chamber … the walls are enormously thick
.
– Saint-Simon
The doctors come blindfolded
into the palace
they deliver babies
borne by masked women
anonymous screaming flesh
children
pulled from the womb
torn from the arms
the anonymous
flesh of the palace
taken to grow in
some other garden
next evening
the women perform at the ball
prepare their cards for the table
tiny fists
close up in their brains
The only thing I ever asked
was porcelain
a playhouse here
among the trees
you gave me faience
pretending to be porcelain
see the pools outside the door
blue and white
blue and white
convince me that is porcelain
porcelain and privacy
you gave me a forest of spyglasses
focusing on faience
blue and white
convince me this is porcelain
and permanence
unfolding here without
your strict approval
I want to keep
my small false castle
built within the time
frame of a miracle
the tiny garden with its urns
blue and white
you tear it down
because you cannot change it
improve it or expand it
the little structure
worked upon a lie
blue and white
blue and white
imaginary porcelain
shards sing
all around your feet
Today I walked as far as the Trianons – an incredible distance. The garden around moves from one point to another. You do not pass it by like any other landscape. It crawls by you and the weather changes before it moves.
I walk away from the palace in a light drizzle, arriving at the Trianons with the sun full in the sky. It is broken into splinters on the west arm of the canal.
I arrive, realizing that there is very little of him left there. All that remains is one intimate allée, designed by Le Notre for a porcelain playhouse.
The whole geography has moved smoothly into another time.
And there is not a sign of me. The Trianon de Porcelaine is broken. I remain in a neutral room on the north side of the palace, fading into crowds of courtiers.
Walking back towards the palace I have to face the wind. It is almost dark.
There were traces
there was evidence
the room moved in to
hold it
like a dark gold frame
we staggered round like saints
tiny ships sailed at our heels
lilies came to light
all evidence
the letter on the table
the ashes in the grate
until the day the dove
emerged
silent from your mouth
The man who touches you
without love
arrives in a golden coach
drawn by a purebred horse
he carries his hands to you
like old sorrows
he is the death
of the child in you
the beginning of dark
there are no more songs
from the rooms
he moves through
the mouth he puts to yours
contains a brutal statement
your limbs become machinery
to the limits he enforces
he doesn’t lure you into
altered landscapes
keeps his time in
artificial daylight
speaking solid words
and the last glimpse of
his sail on the horizon
never finishes
the stones that felt his step
the sea the bed that you return to
all remember him
his breath remains
forever at your throat
remember him
Poison comes in phials filled with liquids, or packets filled with powders. It can be eaten, drunk, injected, or absorbed through the skin. Choose the scent. Often it is disguised as perfume.
Madame de Montespan, not yet old, but fat from too many babies, registers extreme disapproval. The King is slinking secretly off to other beds. She wants to perfume the Venetian lace at his throat. She wants to powder his wig.
No more aphrodisiacs. She administers them. He moves like a magnet to the iron charms of Madame de Fontagnes. She wants to sweeten that lady’s tea, colour her eau de cologne.
Arsenic, opium, antimony, hemlock
. Sitting alone in her rooms she shakes her head slightly.
Red sulphur, bat’s blood dried dust of moles, yellow sulphur
.
Poison, a ritual extending from her body. The chalice rests on her stomach, her breasts fall away from her ribcage. It is the older woman, more wrinkled than herself. She whispers incantations and recipes into her ears. The younger one offers her flesh, like ripe fruit for the appetite of some darker power.
Iron filings, resin of dried plums
.
She is falling, falling from favour. She hates him. She loves him. She sees him dead, surrounded by satin then safe in the tomb.
Her
poison trapped in his body like sperm in a uterus.
During the ceremony she spells his name backwards on her inner thigh in donkey’s blood. She spells his name forwards with some of her own. Someone saves the knife for a Baroque Forensic lab.
Decades later she pays four young women to remain in her room from nightfall to dawn. At her request they play cards and drink wine for ten dark hours. They laugh, gossip, while she hides behind the velvet curtains remembering the poison that perfumed her dreams.
She thinks of the still, warm, dead heart of a pigeon, housed in a vermilion box, said to have power, but useless without the bird itself, without flight. Finally it had bloated, become putrid, had to be disposed of along with the box that held it.
Beyond the curtains the women discuss their lovers in the warm glow of the candles. Their smooth hands finger the cards nervously.
Madame de Montespan closes the lid on the poison.
In fields that unfurl to
the left of the garden
twelve grey horses
ease into canter
their loins adjust to
the three-beat rhythm
breaking like thunder
deep in the forest
flashing by branches
trampling moss
I never see them
here in this dream where
I’m pacing my limbs to
the nod of the trainer
here in this dream
educated muscle
covers the length of
my bones
I remember
clouds of rhythm
surrounding the palace
his step on the stair
his key in the lock
the supple behaviour
the hunt and the harness
unyielding
Coaches departing
are the years pulling away
stern their private latches
closed on cool compartments
once I wept the distance
remembering the pressure
limb on limb
and the landscape outside
ringing like time
you coasting from my view
from balconies I have seen
you coast from my view
I have seen you hunched
like a thief over the wheel
of the months turning
another year towards closure
the inevitable closure
quiet click
of the door’s latch
how I bolt it afterwards
the metal hard against my hand
The poison is absorbed
into the meat of his back
the muscle
I want it to travel
nerves sinews
chords of tissue
to answer the pluck of pain
I want to kill from without
the whole man
his body absorbing the entire
corruption
a final message from
blood to brain
until it bubbles away
the last sentence
frozen in his eyes
and me answering
Glass Coffins
It was not wise to leave so precious a relic in an undefended place outside the walls of town … because in those days a saint’s body was esteemed more than a treasure
.
– The Little Flowers of Saint Clare
During this long winter we rarely go outside, though it is seldom warmer in our rooms. The interior of the palace has become a condensed winter world – cold mirrors, frozen chandeliers. Our fogged breath precedes us everywhere, softening candelabra and fresco.
It is as if the garden has completely disappeared. We can hear the wind and the groaning of the giant trees. But we never see outside. Thousands of window panes are covered by a thick frost.
There are no more gold settings at the table. Too much warmth in the cutlery is ridiculous. Soon the silver will disappear as well, reducing us to crockery.
It is February and we are surprised by a miraculous sun. He insists that we move outdoors, walk in his white garden. We don’t object, put on our cloaks and boots, leave rooms for the first time in months.
At first we are overcome by endless snow and the shock of the first cold swallow of air, fresh on the tissues of our lungs. But when we can see again we are amazed by the unbroken surface of white and the open blue of the sky. The ground plan of the garden is erased by winter.
The statues are confused, awkward under hats and epaulets of snow. Urns grow ice. Our steps are new marks, making new boundaries.
We move towards the Bassin D’Apollon, watching as the metal forms take shape against white. We are able to pick out the four horses, the sea monster, the torso of the young god emerging from his chariot. The wind has swept all the snow away from the Bassin, revealing enclosed ice,
thick as marble. The sculpture is now locked, changed completely, made impotent by ice.
He, standing there looking at this, understands for the first time that all his monuments are immovable, frozen in their own time. They are like novelties on display, already under glass.
The Sun God and his Chariot, powerless in a cold, cold season.
The light, the wind, revealing all of this. Making the image totally clear. And totally brutal.