It is impossible for a man to learn what he thinks he already knows.

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Quotes

It is impossible for a man to learn what he thinks he already knows.
Notes

Never stop learning because life never stop Teaching

Never stop learning because life never stop Teaching

Friday, 19 December 2014

Rape of the Lock : a social satire

Rape of the Lock : a social satire

Poetic satire may be regarded as didactic poetry or the object it has in view is the reformation of man and his manners and to this end, the satirist takes the liberty of boldly censuring vice andvicious characters. “
The true end of satire is the amendment of vice by correction”, says Dryden
.Most people agree that satire is the criticism of life and an exposure of human weaknesses,follies, absurdities and shortcomings. The satirist uses humor, wit, mockery, ridicule and irony toachieve his goal – his moral end. The Rape of the Lock is a satire on the aristocratic strata of the18th
century society. In the very opening lines, the poet laughs at “little” men engaging in “bold”tasks and at gentle ladies who are capable of such “Mighty rage”
In tasks so bold little men engage, And in soft bosoms dwell such mighty rage
 The contrast between “tasks so bold” and “Little men” and another between “soft bosoms” and“Mighty rage” is very wittingly constructed and cuts down to size these vain people of Pope’stime. Juvenal and Horace are the two well-known satirists in the verse of Roman Literature. Theformer’s satire is pointed, full of force and often savage like that of Swift, but Horace’s irony ismore graceful and easy. He chides with a smile. Satire is a distinct element in Chaucer and yethe cannot be called a satirist. There is no misanthropy or cynicism in him. In theElizabethan Age, John Donne and John Marston wrote poetic satires, but their work lack vigor. Inthe seventeenth century, Dryden wrote a number of satires such as the Hind and the Panther, theDunciad and the Progress of Dullness. According to Richard Garnett, “The expression inadequate terms of the sense of amusement for disgust excited by the ridiculous or unseemly,provided that humor is a distinctly recognized element. Without humor satire is invective; withoutliterary form it is mere clownish jeering.”
Pope’s satire
: The true objective of satire is moral. It amends vice by castigation. The satirist, inthe words of Dryden, “
is no more an enemy to the offender than the physician to the patient whenhe prescribes harsh remedies to an inveterate disease
”. Pope’s satire, too, functions insomewhat the same manner. Satire predominates the work of Pope. Even a cursory glance at hispoetry reveals that the major part of it consists of satire. The Rape of the Lock, the Dunciad andMoral Essays are the best of his satires. Pope wrote many satires against individuals, whichwere deadly, sharp and bitter marked by malice. Stopford Brook in comparing Dryden and Popeas satirists says, “
Dryden’s satire has relation not to the man he is satirizing, but to the whole of human race. Pope’s satire is thin, it confines itself to the person and has no relation to the world
.”In the Rape of the Lock, the whole panorama is limited to the 18th
century aristocratic life. In thestrange battle fought between the fashionable belles and the vain beau, the fall of Dapperwit andSir Fopling is particularly demonstrative of the hollowness of the people of this age:
 A beau and witling perished in the throng One died in metaphor, and one in song
 Even the greatest of the great, the Queen herself is satirized to produce a truly comical and wittyeffect.
Here thou, a great Anna whom three realms obey/ Dost sometimes counsel take – and sometimes tea.
The satire in the Rape of the Lock is directed not against any individual, but against the folliesand vanities in general of fashionable men and women. Pope started writing this poem toreconcile two quarreling families but as the poem progressed, the poet forgot his originalintention and satirized female follies and vanities. Belinda is not Arabella Fermore. She is thetype of the fashionable ladies of the time and in her the follies and frivolities of the whole sex issatirized. The Baron represents not Petre alone but typifies the aristocratic gentleman of that age.The strange battle between the sexes shows what kind of people they are.

When bold Sir Plume had drawn Clarissa down,Chloe stepped in, and killed him with a frown;She smiled to see the doughty hero slain,But, at her smile, the beau revived again.
Instances of Satire
: The poet has satirized the system of judges that they, at 4 o’clock, hurriedlysign the sentence so that they could have their dinner in time.
Meanwhile, declining from the noon of day,The sun obliquely shoots his burning ray,The hungry judges soon the sentence sign, And wretches hand that jurymen may dine;
 Even the concept of friendship has been attack. Friends are hollow and fickle. Belinda’s friendThalestris is as shallow as the age he lives in. As soon as Belinda’s reputation is gone, shedoesn’t like to be called her friend. Thus it a direct satire on the upper-class society of Pope’stime. It doesn’t condemn like Swift, but simply and lightly exposes the frivolities and dandies of the people.It is in fact a satire on feminine dandies. Women are all frivolous beings, whose genuine interestlies in love-making. The same sentiment is really implied in the more playful lines of
the Rape of the Lock.
The sylphs are warned by omens that some misfortune impends; but they don’t knowthat.
Use Diana’s Passage above!
Pope was inspired by a prevailing sentiment of contemptagainst the whole female sex. The witty lines are read not with kindly irony but as disagreeablesneers.
Conclusion
: The poem is a reflection of this artificial and hollow life, painted with a humorousand delicate satire. It paints the ideal life of the pleasure-seeking young men and women. Itintroduces to us a world of fashion and frivolities. These pleasures are petty – flirting, card-laying,driving in Hyde Park, visiting theaters and writing love-letters. Their whole day’s program seemsto be nothing but a waste. Their whole day’s program seems to be nothing but a waste.Give here a synopsis of the poem.Pope’s satire is unique, intellectual and full o wit and epigram. Lowell rightly says that “
Popestands by himself in English verse as an intellectual observer and describer of personal weaknesses
”.

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