Prince began to write verse in 1827, and from the following year he was an occasional contributor to the
Phœnix and other local periodicals. After moving to Long Millgate in Manchester in 1840 and opening a book and stationery store, Prince began frequenting the nearby Sun Inn and became a popular figure among the regular clientele of working class intellectuals. He formed a close friendship group with other poets and writers, around which a working class poetry collective known as
the Sun Inn Group emerged. The Group established the Lancashire Literary Association in 1841, and in 1842 they published their only anthology,
The Festive Wreath. Other members of the Sun Inn Group included
Samuel Bamford,
John Bolton Rogerson,
Isabella Banks,
Robert Rose,
Charles Swain, and
Robert Story. In 1842 he undertook a journey on foot to London, recording his impressions and experiences in a series of letters to ''Bradshaw's Journal'', edited by George Falkner, another member of the Sun Inn Group. Besides the
Hours with the Muses, of which six editions were issued between 1840 and 1857, Prince published: •
Dreams and Realities, Ashton-under-Lyne, 1847 •
The Poetic Rosary, Manchester, 1850 •
Autumn Leaves, Hyde, 1856 •
Miscellaneous Poems, 1861 A collected edition of his poetical works was published, in two volumes, by Robert Alexander Douglas-Lithgow in 1880. According to a present-day critic, Prince "disapproved of socialism and Chartism and his verse rarely touches on social issues; it consists mostly of anodyne lyrics on religion and nature, and, considering the circumstances of his life, is astonishingly sunny and optimistic." ==Notes==