"I TRAVELLED AMONG UNKNOWN MEN"

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Composed 1799.-Published 1807




One of the "Poems founded on the Affections."--Ed.


I travelled among unknown men,


In lands beyond the sea;


Nor, England! did I know till then


What love I bore to thee.


'Tis past, that melancholy dream!


Nor will I quit thy shore


A second time; for still I seem


To love thee more and more.


Among thy mountains did I feel


The joy of my desire; [1]


And she I cherished turned her wheel


Beside an English fire.


Thy mornings showed, thy nights concealed


The bowers where Lucy played;


And thine too is the last green field


That Lucy's eyes surveyed. [2] [A]



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VARIANTS ON THE TEXT



[Variant 1:


The gladness of desire; MS.]


[Variant 2:1836.

And thine is, too, the last green field


Which ... 1807.


That ... 1815.]




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FOOTNOTES ON THE TEXT


[Footnote A: Compare Sara Coleridge's comment on this poem in the 'Biographia Literaria' (1847), vol. ii. chap. ix. p. 173. Also Mrs.Oliphant's remarks in her 'Literary History of the Nineteenth Century', vol. i. pp. 306-9.--Ed.]



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