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Reviews for The Rape of the Lock

 The Rape of the Lock magazine reviews

The average rating for The Rape of the Lock based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-10-13 00:00:00
1971was given a rating of 5 stars David Renegar
"At ev'ry Word a Reputation dies" "The Battle of the Beaux and Belles" by Aubrey Beardsley One of the wittiest poems ever written, and one of my very favorites from my college English literature studies. "The Rape* of the Lock" (first published in 1712) makes good-natured fun of a real-life situation: a 21 year old Baron, Lord Robert Petre, rudely snipped off of a lock of hair from Arabella Fermor, a lovely young lady of his acquaintance, without her consent. Arabella was incensed (the situation wasn't helped when Lord Petre went and married someone else the next year), and the fall-out was causing a feud between their two prominent families. Alexander Pope's friend John Caryll suggest that Pope write a humorous poem about the event, in the hope that it would help everyone involved to lighten up. I'm not sure he succeeded there, but this poem did make a lot of other people extremely happy.What dire Offence from am'rous Causes springs, What mighty Contests rise from trivial Things, I sing -- This Verse to Caryll, Muse! is due...Pope wrote a mock epic version of the story, with Arabella (or Belle) renamed as Belinda. Say what strange Motive, Goddess! could compel A well-bred Lord to assault a gentle Belle? Oh say what stranger Cause, yet unexplored, Could make a gentle Belle reject a Lord?The poem follows the elaborate epic literary traditions of classics like The Iliad and Paradise Lost, but subverts them: it has supernatural beings (Bella's rather ineffective fairies), the arming of the heroine for war (with clothing, jewelry, etc.), a descent into the underworld, and an epic battle (of the sexes) where the heroine slays men with her eyes. The juxtaposition between grand ideas and trivial concerns is delightful:Whether the Nymph shall break Diana's Law, Or some frail China Jar receive a Flaw, Or stain her Honour, or her new Brocade, Forget her Pray'rs, or miss a Masquerade, Or lose her Heart, or Necklace, at a Ball...This poem is a bit on the long side for modern readers, and some parts are more interesting and amusing than others, but it's worth taking the time to savor it and delve into its humor and subtler meanings. *"Rape," by the way, didn't have quite the meaning in the 1700s that it does now. I remember my English professor talking about this, and Shmoop agrees: Words are a lot like snowballs in that respect: as they roll through history, they gather layers and layers of meanings. In the 18th century, in Pope's day, "rape" also meant to carry away or take something from someone by force... "Rape" did have a sexual connotation, but in no way as strongly as it does now. By using it in the title as the verb to describe what happens to Belinda's hair, Pope is playing on both layers of meaning: seizing something by force and personal violation.Reportedly Arabella Fermor was quite charmed with this poem until she realized (or, more likely, it was pointed out to her by friends) that there are some rather risqué double entendres in the poem. Oops.
Review # 2 was written on 2014-01-30 00:00:00
1971was given a rating of 5 stars Jule Rodrigo
I've always believed that miracles can happen and that great physical and/or mental suffering can engender greatness. This indeed proved to be the case with this splendid work by Alexander Pope. I find Pope a fascinating individual. He was a catholic, at a time when legislation was repressive with regard to this religion; he was practically self-educated, a semi-invalid all his life, in fact he contracted Pott's disease, a tubercular affection of the bones, which may have been transmitted through his wet-nurses milk, or through unpasteurized cow's milk. He also suffered from asthma and headaches, and his humpback was a constant target for his critics in literary battles - Pope was called a "hunchbacked toad". In middle age he was 4ft 6in tall and wore a stiffened canvas bodice to support his spine, which twisted like a question mark. Also being a catholic he knew that he could never attend university and so he spent many hours reading and writing in his father's library during his youth. And yet despite all of this, he was driven on with his dream to become a great poet on a par with Shakespeare, Milton, Chaucer and Spenser and a satirical one at that and by sheer doggedness and determination he achieved that with this masterpiece. Pope was desperate for fame and his opportunity came when his friend and neighbour, John Caryll told him about a lover's quarrel that had occurred between Arabella Fermor and Lord Petre, when the latter stealthily removed a lock of her hair with a pair of scissors but the sinful fact was that he hadn't asked her permission. The result of this lack of decorum was a rift between the two families as the Fermor family felt slighted. There was a tacit understanding that the couple would become engaged but Lord Petre never pursued the matter and subsequently married someone else. This removal of hair was evidently seen as a significant intimate and sexual act that implied that marriage was in the air. As Caryll was friendly with both families, he wanted Pope to write an amusing poem of the affair to reunite the two families and the outcome was this wonderful poem. The book comprises five cantos known as An Heroi-comical Poem of Five Cantos beginning with Ariel, a sylph carefully keeping an eye on Belinda (interestingly enough Arabella was known as Bell). Pope had originally written two cantos when he was twenty three and expanded these to five over the following three years. But what is really exciting about this work is that the nine drawings (known as "embroidery" because of their finely detailed style) by Aubrey Beardsley are masterpieces in their own right. There's a central motif running through five of them. There is a specific individual involved but I can still only find four. See if you can find them when you read the poem. All of the couplets are excellent but the two I particularly liked were: Of these am I, who thy Protection Claim, A watchful Sprite, and Ariel is my Name. Late as I rang'd the crystal Wilds of Air, In the clear Mirror of thy ruling Star I saw, alas! some dread Event impend, Ere to the Main this morning's Sun descend, But Heav'n reveals not what, or how, or where: Warn'd by thy Sylph, oh pious Maid beware! This is to disclose is all thy Guardian can. Beware of all, but most beware of Man! and, It grieves me much (replied the Peer again) Who speaks so well shou'd ever speak in vain But by this lock; this sacred Lock I swear, (Which never more shall join its parted Hair; Which never more its Honours shall renew, Clipp'd from the lovely Head where late it grew) That while my Nostrils draw the vital Air, This Hand, which won it, shall for ever wear. He spoke, and speaking, in proud Triumph spread The long-contended Honours of her Head. If you are a couplet lover then this exquisite poem will be ideal for you. I read it purely for the pleasure of reading the first time around but when I reread it I could see that throughout this amusing and satirical epic, there were layers hiding a dark side. There's also the magical faerie aspect of the book which is enchanting and one can see that Pope was influenced by Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. I originally read this on Kindle, but I've ordered the hardcover today as Kindle, I believe, has not quite captured the essence of Beardsley's remarkable and delicate drawings; also I want to find the individual who, so far, I cannot find in one of Beardsley's drawings. Even after all these years, this is indeed a wonderful work.


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