Reala
12-08-2013, 06:16 PM
Hello everyone,
I've found myself fascinated by the story of F.T. Prince... that said, I've come across a poem by him that reads almost as a riddle and I'm really struggling to decode, despite really liking it (for some reason):
The Token
More beautiful than any gift you gave
You were, a child so beautiful as to seem
To promise ruin what no child can have,
Or woman give. And so a Roman gem
I choose to be your token: here a laurel
Springs to its young height, hangs a broken limb;
And here a group of women wanly quarrel
At a sale of cupids. A hawk looks at them.
I'm wondering if we have any riddle masters out there!
Why does the child promise ruin? What does she not have and what can no woman give? What is the significance of a Roman gem? There are so many questions I'm left with upon finishing this poem that I can't help but love it (despite it going straight over my head!).
Thank you in advance :)
I've found myself fascinated by the story of F.T. Prince... that said, I've come across a poem by him that reads almost as a riddle and I'm really struggling to decode, despite really liking it (for some reason):
The Token
More beautiful than any gift you gave
You were, a child so beautiful as to seem
To promise ruin what no child can have,
Or woman give. And so a Roman gem
I choose to be your token: here a laurel
Springs to its young height, hangs a broken limb;
And here a group of women wanly quarrel
At a sale of cupids. A hawk looks at them.
I'm wondering if we have any riddle masters out there!
Why does the child promise ruin? What does she not have and what can no woman give? What is the significance of a Roman gem? There are so many questions I'm left with upon finishing this poem that I can't help but love it (despite it going straight over my head!).
Thank you in advance :)