Here, I investigate a later Wordsworth poem in its markedly different 1811 and 1842 versions – the verse epistle to Sir George Beaumont. This epistle, calling upon the country house poems developed by Ben Jonson and upon the topographical rambling of Wordsworth’ own youthful verse, should be seen as an attempt to update to new contexts an old form in which the address of patron by poet had modelled a virtuous sociability exemplified in the moral community of the country estate. His epistle, a missive from a domestic journey that is chatty and yet ordered, reveals Wordsworth forging verse-conditions to reshape the inherited model, so that exemplary community takes the form of intimate, domestic sociability based on the dales family rather t...