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Short Flights

Chapter 34: A PRINCE’S TREASURE.
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About This Book

The collection gathers short lyrical poems and sonnets that meditate on seasonal change, love and its vicissitudes, friendship and parting, aspiration and disappointment, and quiet domestic and natural scenes. Many pieces favor intimate first-person reflection, blending pastoral imagery—gardens, birds, waves, and twilight—with moral and spiritual concerns about faith, striving, and memory. Varied short forms, occasional rondeau and sonnet sequences, produce compact musicality and a tone alternating between wistfulness and gentle affirmation, while recurring motifs of journey, secret longing, and consolation knit the individual lyrics into a unified contemplative arc.

A PRINCE’S TREASURE.

[To His Royal Highness, Russell Fortune.]

OUR little prince can’t understand

That this is one of many springs;
He thinks these days for him are planned,
And that for him the robin sings.
All wonder-eyed he walks afield
And makes an invoice of the joys
God strews around for little boys,
And thinks for him they’re first revealed.
It is a solemn thing to him!
He wonders if it’s alright to pull
The little wild flowers beautiful
That in the sea of grasses swim.
More gentle than the violet,
He studies o’er those eyes of blue—
Blue as his eyes are brown, and wet
As his, sometimes, are wet with dew!
Appreciative eyes are his!
Into his apron takes he all
The flowers that to his hand may fall—
The poorest weed so precious is!
His feet leave but the vaguest hints
Of steps along the shadows where
The knightly trees bend down and swear
Allegiance to their little prince.
O gentle, princely lad of ours,
May nature ever hold your heart,
And knowledge of her ways impart
Through lessons of the spring-time flowers;
May spring itself pass ever on
And never lead to summer’s dust,
But make your life an endless dawn,
With endless love, and faith, and trust!