The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (190721). Volume IX. From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift.
III. Pope.
§ 8. The Rape of the Lock.
Young Lord Petre, by snipping a lock of Miss Fermors hair, had caused ill-feeling between the families. Pope was invited by his friend Caryll to allay this by taking the theme for a playful poem. The Rape of the Lock, in its first form, was written within a fortnight and published anonymously in Lintots Miscellany, 1712. For the genre, Pope was indebted to Boileaus Lutrin, as Boileau had been to Tassonis Secchia Rapita; but, in its blending of mock-heroic, satire and delicate fancy, this exquisite specimen of filigree work, as Hazlitt called it, remains unmatched. Popes hand was never happier than in adding to the original sketch his machinery of sylphs and gnomes. But his genius for touching appears throughout. Nothing could better illustrate Popes methods of working than to turn to the earlier version of the six lines beginning canto 1, 13, and to watch how vastly each one has been improved. The parody of Sarpedons speech in the fifth canto was not introduced till the edition of 1717. In Germany, The Rape gave rise to a long series of imitations. |
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