VERSAILLES 199 VERSE smith, he became a sculptor almost equally skilled in working marble and bronze. Only one extant picture can be certainly attributed to him, a "Baptism of Christ" in the Florentine Academy, and in this, according to Vasari, an an- gel's head was by Leonardo da Vinci. Of ANDREA DEL VERROCCHIO ftis bronze statues the "David" and the "Unbelieving Thomas" in Florence, and the great equestrian statue of Barto- '.ommeo Colleoni at Venice, are among the most notable. He died in Venice in 1488. VERSAILLES, a city of France; capi- tal of the department of Seine-et-Oise ; on a plain 11 miles S. W. of Paris. A city more of pleasure than of industry, long accustomed to find its sustenance in the expenditures of a luxurious court, and subsequently a place of residence for many foreigners, attracted there by the salubrity of the climate, the fine prome- nades, and the economy of living, as com- pared with that in Paris, it has few manufactures and little trade. The town covers a large area in proportion to its population, and is of remarkably regu- lar construction, consisting of long and straight streets, crossing at right angles. It is the see of a bishop, and contains a public library of 50,000 volumes, many palatial edifices, public fountains, spa- cious squares, and elm-planted avenues. The great attraction of Versailles is its palace, and the history of this structure may be said to be the history of the town. Louis XIII. built a hunting lodge here, afterward extended into a chateau. The site occupied by the palace is known to have been that of the ancient priory ot St. Julien. Louis XIV. devoted enormous sums to its embellishment, or rather re- construction, under the care of Mansard; and Louis XV., altered the arrangement of the interior. Here was signed in 1783 the peace of Versailles between England and the United States. Under Louis XVI, Versailles continued to be one of the usual residences of the court down to the period of the Revolution, which great event had its beginning here in the meeting of the States-General in May, 1789. At this date the population was 100,000; the palace and its park, the per- fection of formal landscape gardening, have been the model of many capitals. Louis Philippe transformed the palace of Louis XIV. into a museum, to contain trophies of the victories of France. The approach to the palace is by the Place d'Armes and the Cour d' Honneur, in the latter of which are a large equestrian figure of Louis XIV. and other statues. The entire length of the palace is near- ly 1,400 feet. The collections embrace pictures of events in French history, por- traits of French heroes, etc. The most interesting are the pictures by David which illustrate the career of Napoleon, those by Horace Vernet, and some by Ary Scheffer and Delacroix. The gar- dens, with their broad terraces and long alleys, are imposing, but formal; the fountains are on the grandest scale. From the middle of September, 1870, till the conclusion of peace in 1871 Ver- sailles was the center of all the opera- tions of the Germans. On September 20 King William and the Crown Prince entered the town; and there, on Jan. 18, 1871, the former was proclaimed Empe- ror of Germany. On Jan. 28 the capitu- lation of Paris was signed in Versailles; after the peace it was the seat of the National Assembly and government till 1879, and headquarters of the army dur- ing the Commune. The Treaty of Peace which ended the World War was negoti- ated and signed at Versailles. See Peace Treaty. Pop. about 60,000. VERSE, a measured and cadenced form of speech or composition, usually adopted in poetry. It seems to be the natural language of passion, yet it has unquestionably been improved and devel- oped by art. The use of rhymed ca- dences is a comparatively modern inven- tion. Grammarians have elaborately classified the varieties of verse, and ana- lytically distinguished the possible divi- sions of words into bars of accented and unaccented syllables. The term is also applied to a line of poetry consisting of a certain number of metrical feet dis- posed according to the rules of the spe- cies of poetry which the author intends to compose. Verses are of various kinds, as hexameter, pentameter, etc. Blank verse is verse in which the lines do not end in rhymes. Heroic verse is rhjrmed verse in which the lines usually consist