To Prince Edward Of York Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: A BCDEFGHIJBGKLLMLNLMN CJALOGILLNPINOONNNAL MLLLNNLNLJQLNNALNONL NNLOIOONOLRMNNJLALMMOn the Return of the Ophir | A |
- | |
Most well behaved little Prince | B |
As the small boy | C |
Who will one day be the Sovereign Lord | D |
Of certain other small boys | E |
In whom I am interested | F |
I hasten to assure you | G |
Of my loyalty to the Imperial House | H |
Of which you are the joy and hope | I |
And of my respect for your own podgy little person | J |
To day I need scarcely tell you my dear little Prince | B |
Is a very big day for you | G |
Inasmuch as | K |
To day your excellent parents | L |
Their Royal Highnesses | L |
The Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York KG | M |
Return from their wanderings | L |
Laden I am given to understand | N |
With presents for his Royal Highness | L |
Prince Edward of York | M |
Who I am given to understand | N |
Has been a very good boy | C |
During these long weeks of separation | J |
I am quite sure | A |
That you deserve these presents | L |
And that your Grandmama | O |
Will be able to give your parents a very good account of you | G |
And that your Grandpapa | I |
With that tact which is only one of many of his excellent qualities | L |
Will refrain from making reports | L |
Which might lead to parental chastisement | N |
I remember quite well | P |
That when my own Mama and Papa | I |
Returned once from a little jaunt | N |
They brought back with them | O |
As a present for me | O |
A tin cylinder with a spike to it | N |
Which you set on a piece of wood | N |
And spun round | N |
Then you looked through some holes in the tin cylinder | A |
And beheld many wonderful things | L |
Such as a little girl skipping | M |
And jockeys riding a steeplechase on tigers | L |
If your Papa my dear little Prince | L |
Has not brought you one of those | L |
Be sure you ask for it | N |
It is not rude to ask for what you do not see in the window | N |
Providing you say Please | L |
And now before I go | N |
Let me add a few words | L |
Of kindly admonition | J |
I hope you will grow up to be a good and great man | Q |
And that you will never give your parents | L |
Cause for sorrow | N |
By turning Socialist | N |
Or newspaper editor | A |
Or attempting to imitate these Odes | L |
To your infant mind | N |
This last crime | O |
May appear to be the most innocent in the world | N |
Because these odes | L |
God wot | N |
Are so easy to imitate | N |
Diplomats Members of Parliament publishers' assistants | L |
Cabmen poets peers of the realm | O |
Nay even the very crowned heads of Europe | I |
Have at time and time | O |
Been consumed with a desire to do them for me | O |
Because as I have said | N |
It is so easy | O |
Well my dear little Prince | L |
Let us draw our moral | R |
The easy thing is not always the wisest thing | M |
I feel that in my inmost heart | N |
And if you blossom into manhood | N |
With the same conviction | J |
More or less | L |
I make no doubt whatever | A |
That you will be an immense success | L |
As a king | M |
I wish you the best of luck | M |
Thomas William Hodgson Crosland
(1)
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