Delighted nine-year-old helps Camilla cut cake during library visit

Updated

The Duchess of Cornwall had a helping hand when she performed a cake-cutting ceremony – a grinning little boy.

When Camilla asked if anyone wanted to help with her royal duties during a visit to North Swindon Library to promote literacy, nine-year-old Sebastian did not hesitate and jumped up.

Duchess of Cornwall
Duchess of Cornwall

The schoolboy placed his hand on the duchess's fingers and they cut into the tasty treat – which was a recreation of a woodland scene complete with logs, a tree stump, red squirrel, acorns and a book.

Camilla was visiting the Wiltshire town in her role as patron of the National Literacy Trust, to meet the winners of the organisation's Lost Words poetry competition.

Duchess of Cornwall
Duchess of Cornwall

Sebastian, who tried the cake after Camilla offered him the first slice, said: "It was pretty nice, it's a sponge cake covered in chocolate with jam – it must have taken a long time to make."

Author and illustrator Steve Antony, who drew the pictures for comic Tim Minchin's book When I Grow Up, was also at the event.

Duchess of Cornwall
Duchess of Cornwall

The artist, who is patron of Swindon libraries' children's reading services, was tasked with sketching a picture to accompany the duchess reading Come Into The Woods, a poem by Alfred Williams.

With glasses perched on the end of her nose and the youngsters sitting comfortably, she had them mesmerised as she said: "Come into the woods, the wild birds are singing, the white hawthorn's scent wafts into the wind, the skylark is up and the sheep-bells are ringing, young pleasure's before and old sorrow's behind."

Congratulations to Norah, Estella and Molly, winners of Lost Words Poetry Competition.

Primary schools across Swindon have taken part in the @Literacy_Trust competition to write a poem inspired by nature words and Wiltshire dialect. pic.twitter.com/R9Y7xcGmca

— Clarence House (@ClarenceHouse) January 24, 2019

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