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 shoreA second time; for still I seem To love thee more and more.
Among thy mountains did I feel The joy of my desire;
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.1.
Dorothy Wordsworth quotes it in a letter of April 29.
Coleridge was ill and depressed that spring, and was thinking of leaving England to recover his health: "I would go to America, if Wordsworth would go with me . . ." (March 23).
He also considered a long visit to the Azores: "Wordsworth & his Sister have with generous Friendship offered to settle there with me" (May 4)..
A second time.
Coleridge,
Wordsworth, and his sister had spent most of a year in Germany in 1798-99.14.
The Lucy who is the subject of a small group of poems, most of them written in the winter of 1798-99, has never been identified, if she ever existed except as a creation of the poet's imagination.
A widely held theory is that the poems represent an attempt to give literary expression and distance to Wordsworth's feeling of affection for his sister.
In an early notebook (1799?) Woodsworth's "Nutting" is preceded by a passage ddressed to and reproaching his "beloved Friend," named Lucy, for being a ravager of the autumn woods, as the poet remembers himself to have been in boyhood.