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When I Was One-and-Twenty : ウィキペディア英語版 | When I Was One-and-Twenty When I Was One-and-Twenty, or Poem XIII, is the informal name of an untitled poem by A. E. Housman, published in ''A Shropshire Lad'' in 1896. It is the thirteenth in a cycle of 63 poems. One of Housman's most familiar poems, it is untitled but often anthologised under a title taken from its first line. ''The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations'' includes fourteen of its sixteen lines. Housman's ''New York Times'' obituary mentioned the poem: "Typical of his lyrics is the poem which has thrilled the world where English is spoken."〔Staff report (May 02, 1936). "A.E. Housman dead; Poet and Scholar; Two Slender Books, in 1896 and 1922, Won Fame for Shropshire Writer. Taught Latin for Years. Held Chair at Cambridge Since 1911 -- Noted as Editor of Texts of Juvenal and Lucan". ''New York Times''〕 Its subject matter, "then and now" temporal perspective, meter, and narrative structure within each verse parallel those of William Butler Yeats' ''Down by the Salley Gardens'', itself a reworking of ''The Rambling Boys of Pleasure''. ==Text==
When I was one-and-twenty
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