ELEGY XI. He fuggefts the advantages of birth to a perfon of merit, He compares his humble fortune with the diftreffes of others; Taking a view of the country from his retirement, he is led ELEGY XXII. 86 He takes occafion from the fate of Eleanor of Bretagne, to Defcribing the forrow of an ingenuous mind, on the melan- 104 The princess Elizabeth: a ballad alluding to a story recorded of her, when he was prifoner at Woodstock, 1554 124 Ode to a young lady, fomewhat too follicitous about her man- A paftoral ode, to the honourable Sir Richard Lyttelton. 169 |