Delia, To, 1755 Delia, To, An apology for not showing her what I had wrote 13 665, 70 Delia, To, Declaring that her love is all he needs for happiness 17 665, 70 16 665, 70 Demosthenes, To. 652 Denner's Old Woman 609 Fair Lady, whose harmonious name the Rhine Faithful friend 401 697 Forced from home and all its pleasures Fortune! I thank thee: gentle Goddess, thanks Four Ages, The Fowler, On a 649 Grace triumphant in the throne Gracious Lord, our children see Grant me the Muse, ye gods! whose humble flight. 49 650 Gratitude 443 Gratitude and Love to God 521 Grief at parting, Endeavouring to conceal 18 │|3|||$||8|||8 |82ཊྛ 674 669 706 718 671 Hope Hope like the short-lived ray that gleams awhile How blest the youth whom fate ordains. How blest Thy creature is, O God. How happy are the new-born race. How many between east and west. How quick the change from joy to woe. I am fond of the swallow I am just two and two. I am monarch of all I survey I could be well content I own I am shocked at the purchase of slaves. "I love the Lord" is still the strain I place an offering at Thy shrine I ransacked for a theme of song I shall not ask Jean Jacques Rousseau I sing of a journey to Clifton. I sing the sofa. I who lately sang I slept when Venus entered I suffer fruitless anguish day by day I was a grovelling creature once Icta fenestra Eure flatu stridebat, avarus If I write not to you Immortal Memory of the Halibut, To the |