The speaker of a poem by this author promises that all of his “muscle, sinew, and vein / which tile this house, will come again” after he “contributes his firmness” to a glass pane he engraves. In another poem by this author, the speaker describes the “mintage” of his own tears, which are “coined” by the addressee’s face. One of two objects in a third poem by this author “leans and harkens” after the other and “grows erect” as the other “comes home.” The speaker cautions the addressee not to make (*) “sigh-tempests move” in a poem by this author that opens, “As virtuous men pass mildly away.” In comparing himself and his lover to two arms on a compass, this poet wrote, “Thy firmness makes my circle just.” For 10 points, name this poet who wrote Valedictions “of Weeping” and “Forbidding Mourning.” ■END■
ANSWER: John Donne (the unnamed poem is “A Valediction of My Name, in the Window”)
<Darren Petrosino, British Literature>
= Average correct buzz position