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POETRY-1 (ENG403)

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POETRY-1 (ENG403). LECTURE – 27. REVIEW. JOHN DONNE Love Songs Holy Sonnets. ALEXANDER POPE (1688-1744) THE RAPE OF THE LOCK. THE AGE OF POPE. NEOCLASSICAL AGE AUGUSTAN AGE AGE OF REASON PSEUDO CLASSICAL THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. ERA OF AUGUSTUS. The Augustan Age Roman Ruler - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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POETRY-1 (ENG403) LECTURE – 27
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Page 1: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

POETRY-1 (ENG403)

LECTURE – 27

Page 2: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

REVIEW

• JOHN DONNE

• Love Songs• Holy Sonnets

Page 3: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

• ALEXANDER POPE (1688-1744)

o THE RAPE OF THE LOCK

Page 4: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

THE AGE OF POPE

• NEOCLASSICAL AGE• AUGUSTAN AGE• AGE OF REASON• PSEUDO CLASSICAL• THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY

Page 5: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

ERA OF AUGUSTUS

• The Augustan Age• Roman Ruler• 27 B.C – 14 A.D• Classical writers• Horace, Virgil, Ovid• Golden Era of Latin Literature• Common sense, moderation • Reason for Emotion• Elegance for Brevity

Page 6: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

NEOCLASSICAL AGE THE AUGUSTAN AGE IN ENGLAND

• TWO PARTSo The Age of Dryden- 1700o The Age of Pope- 1744

Page 7: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

BACKGROUND TO THE AGE (1)• 17th century : period of great change• Queen Elizabeth- 1603 • James 1 (1603- 1625)• Scottland• Patriotic unity• People resented taxes, alliance with Spain• Middle Class clashed with monarchy• Dissolved 3 parliaments (1604, 1614, 1621)• Imposition of customs, money grants, right of speech

Page 8: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

17th CENTURY BACKGROUND (2)

• Charles 1• Popular• Deceitfulness & wrong headedness• Henriietta Maria/ France• Buckingham as Lord Chancellor• Gave in the petition of civil rights (1628)• No taxation/imprisonment/billeting• 11 years

Page 9: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

17th CENTURY BACKGROUND (3)

• Archbishops punished Puritans• Civil war 1642- 1648

o Royalists/Cavaliers/Catholicso Parliamentary Forces/Puritans

• Sentenced to death in 1649• The Common Wealth (1649- 1653)

o Scotland proclaimed Charles II

• Cromwell took step & succeeded in 1651• Parliament/dissolved

Page 10: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

17th CENTURY BACKGROUND (4)

• Cromwell/Lord Protector• Strong foreign policy• Monarchy by 1658• He died in 1658• Restored monarchy under Charles ll• Long conflict between Catholics & Protestants• Test Act 1673- banned public offices• Charle ll died in 1685• James became king

Page 11: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

17th CENTURY BACKGROUND (5) • His daughter Mary & William: joint monarchs • Protestants• The Bill of Rights (1689)• Catholics were banned• No Catholic king/queen• No king could marry a Catholic• Places of worship• Their own teachers & preachers• Government positions & universities

Page 12: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

SOCIAL BACKGROUND o Horse racingo Bear baiting o The sport of the cock-pito Theatrical performance• Great Plague of London- 1 million Londoners • Isaac Newton escaped- moved away

• Coffee Houses / Intellectual Huts• Centers of commercial & literary activities• Knowledge was taken out of libraries• Transplanted into the coffee houses

Page 13: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

CHARACTERISTICS OF THE AGE

• 18th Century is characterized for:o Ordero Clarityo Decorumo Stability o Reasono Wito Intelligence o Imagination was replaced by reason.

Page 14: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

CHARACTERISTICS OF THE AGE

• Appreciation of reason• Control of emotions• Correctness in life & art

Page 15: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

LITERARY GENRES

• Poetry• Birth of Novel • Essays • Heroic Couplet• Satire • “literature of manners”

Page 16: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

NOTABLE WRITERS OF THE AGE

• Dryden• Pope• Swift• Addison• John Gay

Page 17: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

LITERARY INSPIRATION

• French Model of Writing• Nature as Model of Discipline• Logic & Reason• Long Sentences• Difficult Diction

Page 18: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

LITERARY MODEL

• Latin & Greek Writers:o Ovido Horaceo Virgil

• Imitated Classical Works

o Epico Pastoralo Satireo Pindaric Ode

Page 19: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

PRINCIPLES OF LITERARY WORKS

• Dryden’s An Essay of Dramatic Poesy (1668)• Pope’s Essay on Criticism (1711)

Page 20: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

ALEXANDER POPE (1)

• Born in London (1688)• Middle class• Alexander Pope & Edith• Roman Catholic Family• Her family; divided along Catholic & Protestant lines• Linen trader• Repressive legislations & Prejudices• No Universities for Catholics• No Public employment• Uneven education

Page 21: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

ALEXANDER POPE (2)

• Often interrupted• Reading books/Father’s library• He was 12 years• Family moved to Benfield in Windsor Forest• Tuberculosis of Bones through infected milk • Pott’s disease• Became invalid• Dwarfish all his life (4.6 feet)• Could not travel on bumpy roads

Page 22: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

ALEXANDER POPE (3)

• Also suffered from Asthma, Headaches• Humpback: target in literary battles• “Hunchbacked toad” • Remained a bachelor • His religious faith • Good educational institution• Self educated man• Several languages

Page 23: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

ALEXANDER POPE (4)

• Aunt: taught him to read & write• Local Priest: Latin & Greek• Later learnt French & Italian• Read the works of great writers• Homer, Virgil, Chaucer• Shakespeare, Spenser, Milton, • Imitated the works of great writers• Resolute to be literary figure• Made several visits to London

Page 24: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

ALEXANDER POPE (5)

• Made friendship with learned men• William Walsh, Congreve, Wycherly, Garth, 1st Earl of

Oxford, Jonathan Swift• Moved to London• Published his major literary works• “An Essay on Criticism”• Discussion based on neoclassical doctrines

“Whoever thinks a faultless piece to see,Thinks what ne’er was, nor is, nor e’er shall be.”

Page 25: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

ALEXANDER POPE (6)

• “The Rape of the Lock” (1712)• Elegant Satire• Helped Swift: Gulliver’s Travels• Published “Essay on Man” (1733-34)• Examined human condition• Against Miltonic Cosmic background• Evocative, dramatic, exciting & concrete• Popular for his Satirical Works/witty• Translated Illiad & Odyssey• Great achievement/ financial support

Page 26: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

ALEXANDER POPE (7)

• Moved to Twichkenham• It inspired him to study landscape gardening• No notable literary works • Revised & edited earlier works• His health declined• Died at the age of 56 in 1744

Page 27: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

THE RAPE OF THE LOCK

• “The Rape of the Lock” (1712)• Elegant Satire• Hysterical Battles between the sexes• Follies of young• It consisted of 2 Cantos• Expanded in 1714• Consisted of 5 cantos

Page 28: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

THE BASIS OF STORY

• Based on a quarrel between two families• Pope knew both families• Lord Petre cut off lock of Miss Arabella

Fermor’s hair• John Caryll’s suggestion: to write a poem on

this incident

Page 29: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

STORY OF THE POEM

• A young lady, Belinda• She wakes up• Description of her beauty aids• She plays cards, flirts, drinks coffee• She lost a lock of her hair• Stolen by a devoted young man

Page 30: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

THE RAPE OF THE LOCK

• Trivial Incident• Mock-heroic treatment• Satire on the contemporary society• High-society obsessions & concerns• It recommends a reform

Page 31: POETRY-1 (ENG403)

REVIEW OF LECTURE 27

• Background of the Neoclassical Age• Characteristics of the Age • Literary Genres• Notable Writers • Biography of Alexander Pope• The Rape of the Lock• Origin of the Poem• Theme & Subject matter of the poem


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