Poems (Cook)/The Old Palace

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4454210Poems — The Old PalaceEliza Cook
THE OLD PALACE.
Oh, the Palace look'd so great and grand
When its walls stood up in giant pride;
When it held the highest in the land,
And its triumph-gates were flinging wide;
When its turrets bore the banner'd staff,
And the courtyard rung with the prancing hoof;
When the dancing strain and the revel laugh
Went merrily up to the spanning roof.
Oh! the Palace was a noble place
In its palmy days of strength and grace.

Tower and terrace have fallen low,
And the banquet hall is dimly seen;
Through ivy and bindweed that twine as they go
In shadowy folds of gray and green.
Ages have blotted the sculptured crest,
The wind sings through the portal stone;
It stands like an eagle's forsaken nest;
Dreary and desolate, mournful and lone.
The sun of its brightness for ever has set,
But the lone old Palace is beautiful yet.

We may see a heart as grand and rare,
Stand like the Palace in its prime;
Rich in all that is noble and fair,
Till stricken by Grief, as the Palace by Time.
We may see the moss of a blighted trust
Creeping around its pillars of joy;
But amid the ruin, the gloom, and the dust,
There's a glory abiding that nought can destroy:
For the true heart is great in its lonely decay,
As the Palace is grand in its passing away.