“To a Daughter,” Ensign, Aug. 1976, 5
To a Daughter
Now that you are seventeen,
An important age,
You sweep by me
In your hurry to get places.
Sometimes I would like to follow.
But your world is yours alone.
I think of you as a second hand
On a clock—and I,
I am the minute hand,
Not too far behind,
Glad for the moments
When we make brief contact,
Yet knowing your revolutions
Will always outdistance me.
In your haste, please remember
I am here … not too far behind you.
When you want us to make contact,
Tell me so
And I will run,
Breaking all the laws of nature.
Like a minute hand gone wild
I will run
To catch up with you.