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Introduction: 'All that rout of lascivious poets that wrote epistles and ditties of love'
'Ovid was there and with him were Catullus, Propertius and Tibullus': transmission, teaching and receptions of Roman love elegy in the Renaissance
'For truth and faith in her is laid apart': women's words and the construction of masculinity in Catullus' Lesbia poems and Thomas Wyatt
'"Fool," said my muse to me': reading metapoetics in Propertius 2.1 and 4.7, and Astrophil and Stella
In six numbers let my work rise, and subside in five': authority and impotence in Amores 1.5 and 3.7, Donne's 'To His Mistress Going To Bed', and Nashe's Choice of Valentines
'My heart... with love did inly burn': female authorship and desire in Sulpicia, Mary Sidney's Antonie and Mary Wroth's Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
Conclusion: 'And love doth hold my hand and makes me write'.

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