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COMPOSED NEAR CALAIS, ON THE ROAD LEADING TO ARDRES, AUGUST 7, 1802 [A]
Composed August, 1802.—Published 1807
One of the “Sonnets dedicated to Liberty”; re-named in 1845, “Poems dedicated to National Independence and Liberty.”—Ed.
Jones! as [1] from Calais southward you and I Went pacing side by side, this public Way Streamed with the pomp of a too-credulous day, [B] When faith was pledged to new-born Liberty: [2] A homeless sound of joy was in the sky: 5 From hour to hour the antiquated Earth, [3] Beat like the heart of Man: songs, garlands, mirth, [4] Banners, and happy faces, far and nigh! And now, sole register that these things were, Two solitary greetings have I heard, 10 “Good morrow, Citizen!” a hollow word, As if a dead man spake it! Yet despair Touches me not, though pensive as a bird Whose vernal coverts winter hath laid bare. [5]
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VARIANTS ON THE TEXT
[Variant 1:
1837.
... when ... 1807.
... while ... 1820.]
[Variant 2:
1837.
Travell’d on foot together; then
this Way,
Which I am pacing now, was like the May
With festivals of new-born Liberty:
1807.
Where I am walking now ... MS.
Urged our accordant steps, this public
Way
Streamed with the pomp of a too-credulous
day,
When faith was pledged to new-born Liberty:
1820.]
[Variant 3:
1845.
The antiquated Earth, as one might say, 1807.
The antiquated Earth, hopeful and gay, 1837.]
[Variant 4:
1845.
... garlands, play, 1807.]
[Variant 5:
1827.
I feel not: happy am I as a Bird:
Fair seasons yet will come, and hopes
as fair. 1807.
I feel not: jocund as a warbling Bird; 1820.]
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FOOTNOTES ON THE TEXT
[Footnote A: In the editions of 1807 to 1837 this is a sub-title, the chief title being ‘To a Friend’. In the editions of 1840-1843, the chief title is retained in the Table of Contents, but is erased in the text.—Ed.]
[Footnote B: 14th July 1790.—W. W. 1820.]
This sonnet, originally entitled ’To a Friend, composed near Calais, on the Road leading to Ardres, August 7th, 1802’, was addressed to Robert Jones, of Plas-yn-llan, near Ruthin, Denbighshire, a brother collegian at Cambridge, and afterwards a fellow of St. John’s College, and incumbent of Soulderne, near Deddington, in Oxfordshire. It was to him that Wordsworth dedicated his ‘Descriptive Sketches’, which record their wanderings together in Switzerland; and it is to the pedestrian tour, undertaken by the two friends in the long vacation of 1790, that he refers in the above sonnet. The character of Jones is sketched in the poem written in 1800, beginning: