IV.

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"Come, Edmund, now the sun goes down,

Thy many wanderings tell!

Say, after all thine eyes have seen,

If home appears so well!"

"So well! alas! ye do not know

How absence can endear!

In every hill, in every tree,

A thousand charms appear.

"The verdure of these English fields

Seems in my heart to glow—

There, as this shaded river winds,

I feel its waters flow.

"For, though I ventured forth so bold,

So long, so far did roam,

Affection, like a wayward child,

Still wept and murmur'd, home!

"I persevered, yet still I strained

The pleader to my breast;

I hush'd her cries, but as I chid

More fondly still carest.

"And when I met with foreign dames

Of grace and beauty rare—

I fancied one dear village girl

Like them: but oh! how fair!

"My early playmate! oft I humm'd

The lays she lisping sung!

And sigh'd when looking on the arm,

Where she at parting hung.

"Then, joy! within my native vale

To find my Ellen free!

To fancy others pleas'd her not,

Because she thought on me!

"So closely round a glowing heart

Did never flowers entwine!

Oh! ne'er was mortal spirit lull'd

With visions sweet as mine!"

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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