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It will be very remarkable if similar appearances are always found upon the junction of the alpine with the level countries. Such an appearance, I am inclined to think, may be found in the Val d'Aoste, near Yvrée. M. de Saussure describes such a stone as having been employed in building the triumphal arch erected in honour of Augustus. "Cet arc qui étoit anciennement revêtu de marbre, est construit de grands quartiers d'une espèce assez singulière de poudingue ou de grès

Straightway all the loyal nobles begin yelling vive le Roi! and the officer goes round solemnly and sets yonder great clock in the Cour de Marbre to the hour of the king's death. This old Louis had solemnly ordained; but the Versailles clock was only set twice: there was no shouting of Vive le Roi when the successor of Louis XV. mounted to heaven to join his sainted family.

The sudden flashes of colour reminded him of the gleam of the opal-and-iris-throated birds that flutter round the tall honey-combed Campanile, or stalk, with such stately grace, through the dim, dust-stained arcades. Leaning back with half-closed eyes, he kept saying over and over to himself: "Devant une façade rose, Sur le marbre d'un escalier." The whole of Venice was in those two lines.

Having opened his newspaper to find out what was being played, the sight of the title Les Filles de Marbre, by Theodore Barriere, struck him so cruel a blow that he recoiled instinctively from it and turned his head away.

«On peut prendre une idée légère et imparfaite de cette majestueuse enceint, en se la figurant comme un amphithéâtre moins remarquable par la vaste étendue de son arêne que par la hauteur prodigieuse de ses murs qui, par-tout bordés de parties saillantes, d'échancrures profondes, et hérissés de rochers dont la ruine est prochaine, se sont entièrement écroulés du côté du nord; elle-est couronnée vers le sud par deux sommets cylindriques recouverts d'une croûte épaisse de neige durcie, et que leur forme a fait nommer tour de marbre. Au-dessous se succèdent, en forme de gradins, de vastes platte bandes d'une neige qui ne disparoît jamais, et qui ne cesse point de se fondre insensiblement. Les eaux produites par cette stillation continuelle se divisent en sept ou huit petits torrens qui naissant sous ces lits de glace, et roulent sur le penchant rapide de la montagne ou jaillissent en cascades, quand elle se trouve coupée a pic. L'un de ces torrens venant du côté de l'est et dont le volume surpasse celui de tous les autres ensemble, se précipite du haut d'un rocher qui s'avance en saillie, et tombe avec un bruit horrible

This Cour de Marbre, on January 5, 1757, was the scene of the infamous attack on Louis XV by Damiens, just as the king was starting out for the Trianon. A thick redingote saved the king's life; but for "this mere pin-prick," according to Voltaire, the monarch went immediately to bed, and five times in succession sought absolution for his sins. Sins lay heavy even on royal heads in those days.

The small château, built by Lemercier in the early half of the seventeenth century, was handed over to Levau in 1668, who, carefully respecting his predecessor's work in the Cour de Marbre, constructed two immense wings, which were added to by J.H. Mansard, as the requirements of the court grew.

The first of the outdoor embellishments of the palace at Versailles is the great Cour Royale, or the Cour d'Honneur, which opens out behind the long range of iron gates facing upon the Place d'Armes. At the foot of this entrance court is an extension called the Cour de Marbre.

It was a house in which Pugin would have torn his hair. Those massive blocks of red-veined marble lining the hall emulating in their surface-glitter the Escalier de Marbre at Versailles were cunning imitations in paint and plaster by workmen brought from afar for the purpose, at a prodigious expense, by the present viscount's father, and recently repaired and re- varnished.

Devant une facade rose, Sur le marbre d'un escalier. The whole of Venice was in those two lines. He remembered the autumn that he had passed there, and a wonderful love that had stirred him to delightful fantastic follies. There was romance in every place. But Venice, like Oxford, had kept the background for romance, and background was everything, or almost everything.