| Elegy 13. He Imagines Himself Married to Delia, and That Content with Each Other They Are Retired into the Country - |
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| Elegy 14. To Delia - |
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| Elegy 15. To Miss Dashwood. In the Manner of Ovid - |
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| Elegy 16. To Mr. George Grenville - |
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| Elegy 1. On His Falling in Love with Neaera - |
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| Elegy 2. Unable to Satisfy the Covetous Temper of Neaera, He Intends to Make a Campaign, and Try, if Possible, to Forget Her - |
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| Elegy 3. He Upbraids and Threatens the Avarice of Neaera, and Resolves to Quit Her - |
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| Elegy 4. To His Friend, Written Under the Confinement of a Long Indisposition - |
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| Elegy 5. The Lover Is at First Introduced Speaking to His Servant, He Afterwards Addresses Himself to His Mistress, and at Last There Is a Supposed Interview between Them - |
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| Elegy 6. He Adjures Delia to Pity Him by Their Friendship with Celia Who Was Lately Dead - |
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