His skill at these events provided the most famous nickname of 18th-century poet, member of parliament, and hat-maker Richard Sharp. Miss Notable says, “I’m as old as my Tongue, and a little older than my Teeth,” in a satirical collection titled for these “Ingenious” events by Jonathan Swift. These events title a five-volume collection whose later editions incorporate the author’s 1837 Pentameron and a series partially titled for Sovereigns and Statesmen. Two sections of a book titled for these events feature (*) Xanthus’s female slave Rhodope and her lover Aesop. “Literary men” like John Milton and Andrew Marvell are among those who are paired off for these title events in a book by Walter Savage Landor. For 10 points, “The Eolian Harp” and “Frost at Midnight” are part of a group of Coleridge poems titled for what events? ■END■
ANSWER: conversations [or Imaginary Conversations; or Richard “Conversation” Sharp; or Polite Conversation; or A Complete Collection of Genteel and Ingenious Conversation; or conversation poems; reject synonyms like “dialogues”]
<S, British Literature>
= Average correct buzz position