Poems (Ford)/Ruins

For works with similar titles, see Ruins.

RUINS.
Rising from the earth's green bosom,Scattered over every land,Proud mementos of the gloryOf departed ages stand: Ruins of strong feudal castles,That have braved war's fiercest rage,Bow their heads like stern old warriors,Battle-scarred and crushed with age.
Ruins, too, of grand old temples,Round whose shrines in ancient daysPriest and warrior, king and peasantBent the knee in prayer and praise;Sanctified by saintly worship,They should stand though others fall;But the hand of the destroyer,Time, is sweeping over all.
Sad it is to gaze upon them,—Castle, cloister, shrine, and dome,—And to think that earth's gloriesMust at last to ruin come;That with wrecks the passing agesAll the universe must fill;But each day we see around usRuins grander, sadder still,—
Fallen columns, crumbling archesIn the temple of the soul,That should stand in primal beautyWhile unnumbered ages roll;Glorious souls, for bliss created,Turning from their heavenward way,From a Father's love and mercy,Bow them down to gods of clay.
Wrecks of minds whose soaring pinionsNe'er should touch earth's dust and mold,Bending from the gates of gloryDown to worship gods of gold.Mournful as it is to witnessShrine and palace crumbling low,Wrecks of God's fair human templesAre the saddest earth can show.
But as round each moldering palaceClose the sheltering ivy creeps,So the vine of prayer, upreaching,Still from utter ruin keepsThe soul's temple, till its fragmentsBy our tears be cleansed from stain,When the Architect almightyShall rebuild them all again.