WORKS OF DYER. 911 Elegy XIV. Declining an invitation to vifit foreign countries, he takes occafion to in- timate the advantages of his own, Elegy XV. In the memory of a private fa- Elegy XVI. He fuggefts the advantages of birth to a perfon of merit, and the folly of Elegy XXIV. He takes occafion from the fate of Eleanor of Bretagne, to fuggeft the imperfect pleafures of a folitary life, Elegy XXV. To Delia, with fome flowers; complaining how much his benevolence fuffers on account of his humble fortune, Elegy XXVI. Defcribing the forrows of an ingenuous mind, on the melancholy event Ode to a Young Lady, fomewhat too folici- Nancy of the Vale. A Ballad, Ode to Indolence, |