Sunday, March 11, 2018

A DÉBUTANTE, a poem

             AT last, for weariness,
She slept, yet breathed in dreams a fragrance of success
     Sweeter to her desires than cooling showers,
     Than honey hived in flowers,
Or than those notes which ere the night is done,
Are shyly fluted forth in worship of the sun.
             The longed-for prize
     Her own, again she heard delighted plaudits rise,
     Again her conquest read in beaming eyes,
And scanned each upturned face, and missed but one!

             "O love," she, dreaming, sighed,—
In joy grown sudden sad, and lonely in her pride,—
     "O love, dost thou, of all the world, not care
     These triumphs dear to share?
Dost thou, who sued in griefs to bear a part,
Who lightened discontent, and soothed with heavenly art,
             Forbearing blame—
     Remove when all besides with praises speak my name?"
     Distinct, yet as from far, the answer came:
"Love still demands an undivided heart!"
"A Débutante" by Florence Earle Coates. Published in Lippincott's Monthly Magazine (March 1890) and Poems (1898).

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