To Prince Edward Of York Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: A BCDEFGHIJBGKLLMLNLMN CJALOGILLNPINOONNNAL MLLLNNLNLJQLNNALNONL NNLOIOONOLRMNNJLALMM

On the Return of the OphirA
-
Most well behaved little PrinceB
As the small boyC
Who will one day be the Sovereign LordD
Of certain other small boysE
In whom I am interestedF
I hasten to assure youG
Of my loyalty to the Imperial HouseH
Of which you are the joy and hopeI
And of my respect for your own podgy little personJ
To day I need scarcely tell you my dear little PrinceB
Is a very big day for youG
Inasmuch asK
To day your excellent parentsL
Their Royal HighnessesL
The Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York KGM
Return from their wanderingsL
Laden I am given to understandN
With presents for his Royal HighnessL
Prince Edward of YorkM
Who I am given to understandN
Has been a very good boyC
During these long weeks of separationJ
I am quite sureA
That you deserve these presentsL
And that your GrandmamaO
Will be able to give your parents a very good account of youG
And that your GrandpapaI
With that tact which is only one of many of his excellent qualitiesL
Will refrain from making reportsL
Which might lead to parental chastisementN
I remember quite wellP
That when my own Mama and PapaI
Returned once from a little jauntN
They brought back with themO
As a present for meO
A tin cylinder with a spike to itN
Which you set on a piece of woodN
And spun roundN
Then you looked through some holes in the tin cylinderA
And beheld many wonderful thingsL
Such as a little girl skippingM
And jockeys riding a steeplechase on tigersL
If your Papa my dear little PrinceL
Has not brought you one of thoseL
Be sure you ask for itN
It is not rude to ask for what you do not see in the windowN
Providing you say PleaseL
And now before I goN
Let me add a few wordsL
Of kindly admonitionJ
I hope you will grow up to be a good and great manQ
And that you will never give your parentsL
Cause for sorrowN
By turning SocialistN
Or newspaper editorA
Or attempting to imitate these OdesL
To your infant mindN
This last crimeO
May appear to be the most innocent in the worldN
Because these odesL
God wotN
Are so easy to imitateN
Diplomats Members of Parliament publishers' assistantsL
Cabmen poets peers of the realmO
Nay even the very crowned heads of EuropeI
Have at time and timeO
Been consumed with a desire to do them for meO
Because as I have saidN
It is so easyO
Well my dear little PrinceL
Let us draw our moralR
The easy thing is not always the wisest thingM
I feel that in my inmost heartN
And if you blossom into manhoodN
With the same convictionJ
More or lessL
I make no doubt whateverA
That you will be an immense successL
As a kingM
I wish you the best of luckM

Thomas William Hodgson Crosland



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