LINESWRITTEN AT FREDENSBORG,The deserted Palace of the late Queen Dowager Juliana Maria[18].Bless’d are the steps of Virtue’s queen!Where’er she moves fresh roses bloom;And, when she droops, kind Nature poursHer genuine tears in gentle show’rs,That love to dew the willow greenThat over-canopies her tomb.But, ah! no willing mourner hereAttends to tell the tale of woe:Why is yon statue prostrate thrown?Why has the grass green’d o’er the stone?Why, ’gainst the spider’d casement drear,So sullen seems the wind to blow?How mournful was the lonely bird,Within yon dark neglected grove!Say, was it fancy? From its throatIssu’d a strange and cheerless note;’Twas not so sad as grief I heard,Nor yet so wildly sweet as love.In the deep gloom of yonder dellAmbition’s blood-stain’d victims sigh’d;While Time beholds, without a tear,Fell Desolation hov’ring near,Whose angry blushes seem to tell.Here Juliana shudd’ring died![18]This palace, called the Mansion of Peace, is in the road and near to Elsineur; it was the retreat of the ambitious and remorseless Juliana Maria, the mother-in-law of Christian VII. whose intrigues and jealousy sent Brandt and Struensee to the scaffold, and drove the unhappy Matilda, the mother of the present King of Denmark, from her throne, and the arms of her royal husband. Juliana died here. The palace and grounds, parts of which are beautiful, were, when I visited them in 1804, much neglected.
The deserted Palace of the late Queen Dowager Juliana Maria[18].
Bless’d are the steps of Virtue’s queen!Where’er she moves fresh roses bloom;And, when she droops, kind Nature poursHer genuine tears in gentle show’rs,That love to dew the willow greenThat over-canopies her tomb.But, ah! no willing mourner hereAttends to tell the tale of woe:Why is yon statue prostrate thrown?Why has the grass green’d o’er the stone?Why, ’gainst the spider’d casement drear,So sullen seems the wind to blow?How mournful was the lonely bird,Within yon dark neglected grove!Say, was it fancy? From its throatIssu’d a strange and cheerless note;’Twas not so sad as grief I heard,Nor yet so wildly sweet as love.In the deep gloom of yonder dellAmbition’s blood-stain’d victims sigh’d;While Time beholds, without a tear,Fell Desolation hov’ring near,Whose angry blushes seem to tell.Here Juliana shudd’ring died!
[18]This palace, called the Mansion of Peace, is in the road and near to Elsineur; it was the retreat of the ambitious and remorseless Juliana Maria, the mother-in-law of Christian VII. whose intrigues and jealousy sent Brandt and Struensee to the scaffold, and drove the unhappy Matilda, the mother of the present King of Denmark, from her throne, and the arms of her royal husband. Juliana died here. The palace and grounds, parts of which are beautiful, were, when I visited them in 1804, much neglected.