Across
- 4. In "To Althea, from Prison," what the word "That" refers to in line 28
- 5. In "To Lucasta, Going to the Wars," the moral principle that makes the speaker leave Lucasta
- 6. In "The Constant Lover," what inspires the speaker's love
- 8. In "To Lucasta, Going to the Wars," what war becomes in relation to Lucasta
- 10. In "To Lucasta, Going to the Wars," what the speaker asks Lucasta to show toward his decision to go to war
- 11. In "Why So Pale and Wan, Fond Lover?" how true love must be given
- 13. In Suckling's poems, the tone used to mock romantic behavior
- 14. In "The Constant Lover," how the speaker describes the three days he has been in love
Down
- 1. In "To Althea, from Prison," what the speaker is least concerned about
- 2. In "The Constant Lover," how long the speaker implies his love will last
- 3. In "To Althea, from Prison," the inner freedom the speaker believes he possesses
- 7. In "Why So Pale and Wan, Fond Lover?" what the speaker tells the lovesick man to do to defeat
- 9. In "To Althea, from Prison," beings the speaker says share his freedom
- 12. In "To Lucasta, Going to the Wars," what the speaker says Lucasta should do about his unfaithfulness
