[f. the verb.] An act of wandering.
1843. J. C. Shairp, Lett., 3 Aug., in E. H. Coleridge, Life & Corr. Ld. Coleridge (1894). I. vi. 134. I should like, so, to have one days wander with you amongst these hills.
1872. C. Kingsley, Poems, Delectable Day, iii. The afternoons wander to windward, To meet the dear boy coming back.
1899. H. Wright, Depopulation, xii. 66. You and Allan will go away on a world-wide wander all by yourselves.
1910. Eliz. A. Sharp, William Sharp, vii. 121. One sunset I remember specially. We had gone for a wander westward.