The speaker of a poem states that if one of these objects is taken away, then the “dreadful void” left behind would be “Eternity, Eternity.” For 10 points each:
[10h] Name these objects. The name Archibald Ormsby-Gore was given to one of these objects owned by the poet John Betjeman that inspired a fictional one of these objects owned by a young Lord in a novel.
ANSWER: teddy bear [prompt on stuffed animal or toy; prompt on bear] (The poem is “Archibald” by Betjeman.)
[10m] That teddy bear, Aloysius, is the beloved possession of Sebastian Flyte during his time at Oxford in this 1945 novel.
ANSWER: Brideshead Revisited (by Evelyn Waugh)
[10e] Perhaps the most beloved teddy bear in British literature is Winnie-the-Pooh, who appears in the works of this author and father of the real-life Christopher Robin.
ANSWER: A. A. Milne [or Alan Alexander Milne]
<British Literature>