Poems (Coates 1916)/Volume I/A Maid's Defence

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For other versions of this work, see A Maid's Defence.
787980Poems, Volume I — A Maid's DefenceFlorence Earle Coates

A MAID'S DEFENCE

'TWERE little to renounce what now I hold:
A treasure that makes poor, a pomp that tires,
A vernal glow that kindles autumn fires,
A youth that, wasteful in its haste, grows old;
'T were little to relinquish pleasure doled
In meagre measure to my swift desires,
To give what nor delights me nor inspires,
In free exchange for Love's all-prizèd gold;


Yet there is something it were pain to yield,
Which I should part with, Love, in welcoming thee:
A shy uncertainty that dearer seems
Than e'en thy gifts, my firm defence and shield:
The dim ideal of my waking dreams,
The Love unknown, that distant, beckons me!