A poem by this author in which an “o’er-ravished shepherd” is “unable to perform the sacrifice” was originally misattributed to the Earl of Rochester. For 10 points each:
[10m] The impotent Lysander appears in “The Disappointment,” a poem by what 17th-century member of the “fair triumvirate of wit”?
ANSWER: Aphra Behn [prompt on Aphra Johnson] (The “fair triumvirate of wit” also included Eliza Haywood and Delarivier Manley.)
[10h] The maid in “The Disappointment” has this pastoral name, which Behn used in several poems. A “fair” woman with this name masturbates while lying in a pigsty in a poem by the Earl of Rochester.
ANSWER: Cloris [accept “Fair Chloris in a pigsty lay”]
[10e] In A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf writes that women should let flowers fall on Behn’s tomb in this abbey. Behn is buried in this abbey’s East Cloister, rather than in its Poets’ Corner.
ANSWER: Westminster Abbey [or Collegiate Church of Saint Peter at Westminster]
<British Literature>