Sunday, 19 December 2021

The Rape of the Lock Alexander Pope

 P- 102 Assignment

Name - Nehalba Gohil

Papar - Literature of Neo classical period

Roll no - 15 

Enrollment no - 4069206420210009

Email id - nehalbagohil26@gmail.com

Batch - MA sem-1

Submitted to - S.B. Gardi Department of English

Maharaja Krishnakurarsinhji Bhavanagar University



Alexander Pope

The Rape of the Lock


Belinda arises to prepare for the day’s social activities after sleeping late. Her guardian sylph, Ariel, warned her in a dream that some disaster will befall her, and promises to protect her to the best of his abilities. Belinda takes little notice of this oracle, however. After an elaborate ritual of dressing and primping, she travels on the Thames River to Hampton Court Palace, an ancient royal residence outside of London, where a group of wealthy young socialites are gathering for a party. Among them is the Baron, who has already made up his mind to steal a lock of Belinda’s hair. He has risen early to perform and elaborate set of prayers and sacrifices to promote success in this enterprise. When the partygoers arrive at the palace, they enjoy a tense game of cards, which Pope describes in mock-heroic terms as a battle. This is followed by a round of coffee. Then the Baron takes up a pair of scissors and manages, on the third try, to cut off the coveted lock of Belinda’s hair. Belinda is furious. Umbriel, a mischievous gnome, journeys down to the Cave of Spleen to procure a sack of sighs and a flask of tears which he then bestows on the heroine to fan the flames of her ire. Clarissa, who had aided the Baron in his crime, now urges Belinda to give up her anger in favor of good humor and good sense, moral qualities which will outlast her vanities. But Clarissa’s moralizing falls on deaf ears, and Belinda initiates a scuffle between the ladies and the gentlemen, in which she attempts to recover the severed curl. The lock is lost in the confusion of this mock battle, however; the poet consoles the bereft Belinda with the suggestion that it has been taken up into the heavens and immortalized as a constellation.

Characters 


Belinda

Belinda does her best to look beautiful, styling her hair at great length and otherwise worshipping at the altar of beauty. She also plays quite a game of Ombre, a card game. But beautiful and popular though she is, she isn't a mean girl. In fact, she's known for her good nature. The theft of her lock, however, drives her to distraction.


Baron

The Baron is a brash young fellow. He knows what he wants and plots to get it. He pretends to be involved in an innocent game of Ombre, but all the while he is plotting to steal Belinda's curl. He has many other souvenirs from other young ladies and wants to add Belinda's curl to them. He is entirely without sympathy.


Ariel

Ariel takes his job very seriously. He helps Belinda get ready and does a much better job than her maid, Betty, ever could do. He and the other sylphs flutter around, trying to protect Belinda when she plays cards. Ariel is also a master delegator, rather like the commander of an army. He assigns all the other sylphs jobs of protecting Belinda.


Umbriel is a born mischief-maker. When he sees Belinda's distress, he calls upon the Queen of Spleen to take advantage of the situation. He beseeches her to make Belinda more angry and tearful, and the Queen of Spleen agrees to help him. Umbriel then fans the flames in Belinda's conversation with the Baron.


Thalestris

Thalestris isn't a great friend to Belinda, even though she calls herself one. When Belinda is upset, she exacerbates the situation, reminding Belinda how hard she worked to get her hair just right. She also tells Belinda her reputation will suffer if her hair is displayed—and that as a result, Thalestris's own reputation will suffer if she tries to defend her.


Clarissa

Perhaps Clarissa is jealous of Belinda, or else she is in some other way a frenemy. First she helps the Baron to steal Belinda's lock. Then she lectures Belinda about how she needs to get over it. According to Clarissa in her very long speech, women need to be nice because their beauty will fade.


Sir Plume

Sir Plume is a vain and fashionable dandy with an amber snuffbox and a fancy walking stick. He pretty much answers to Thalestris's command. When Thalestris orders him to demand the Baron return the lock, he does so. He isn't able to get the lock back, but he tries, appealing to the Baron's civility.

Some of the major themes in The Rape of the Lock are beauty, religion and morality, femininity, pride, love, pursuits, and morality of upper class.


Major Themes in Rape of the Lock:

1.    Beauty:

Alexander Pope’s “The Rape of the Lock” offers an ironic glance of court life in the 18th-century, highlighting societies centralized on beauty and appearance. The poem’s center of focus is around the experience of a beautiful woman, Belinda, who lost her lock of remarkable hair to a nobleman known as the Baron. As the poem starts to go along, it steadily becomes sillier and sillier and the characters collapse into a battle over the lock. Pope’s added Clarissa’s speech into the poem, which argues that women spend much time on their looks rather than thinking to become a better person and serve society. The main thesis of Pope was that this kind of self-obsession is useless and radically nonsense. However, the poem’s conclusion seems to suggest that true beauty would be of some value, but if it becomes the subject of poetry, thus it achieves a kind of literary immortality.


Pope mocks Belinda’s obsession with her beauty by comparing it with a hero which is about to go into battle. She beautifies herself all day and appears at court as insignificant. When she lost the lock of her hair, her furious reaction allowed Pope to poke fun at her vanity.  Alexander Pope kept defending the intellectual and moral authority of his female characters through the wisdom of Clarissa’s speech, demonstrating female intellect and morality. He further questioned the wisdom of such a maternal system by outlining the Baron’s behavior as immoral. His fellow male courtiers are foolish. They allowed him to suggest that a maternal society is both unfair and unfounded.


It is important to note that the time Pope wrote the poem it was generally believed that women were both intellectual and moral inferiors of men. Pope seems to say that vanity itself is folly, but to appreciate great art, thus it can be said that one should be careful not to underestimate the role of beauty in inspiring great works like poetry. By using mock epic into the poem, he not only glam up the whole scenario by giving it huge fairy dust powder, but also entertains the question of responsibility in the poem.


2.    Religion and Morality:

Religion and morality is also also on of the major themes in Rape of the Lock. Pope’s poem is full of moral questions about religious culture and life in the 18th-century. The time when the poem was written, England’s last Catholic monarch had been deposed. England, once again, became a Protestant Nation. At that time, Protestant bitterly criticized Catholics, believing that Catholics had strayed from the worship of God.  Pope was from a Catholic family. Throughout the poem, it is possible to detect humorous evaluation of Protestantism. Protestants made life very difficult for Catholic families to own a land or live in London. Pope parodies the hypocritical religious rhetoric of that time and suggests that Christianity is not the best lens. It cannot be used to understand the mysteries of human behavior and self-obsession.

This has profound significance for Pope’s treatment of Christianity. At the heart of Christianity is that people are in control of their wills and actions, but God will judge people accordingly.

Pope shows his ideology that the whole Christian religion, Catholic or Protestant, follows human actions. These actions are mysterious and their motives are opaque. Because of this, it is absurd to believe that anyone could be straightforwardly judged.


3.    Theme of Immorality and Carefree Nature of Upper Class:

Pope has presented that in a matter of times the careless and casual response of high society is dangerous. He presented the society where the upper class is busy in pursuit of their own goals through trivial and vain. He portrayed that upper class people just think about themselves and obsessions. In this poem, the society displayed is one that fails to distinguish between things that matter and things that do not. What they care about is their personal life, luxuries, pomp, vanity. A life that is matchless to the ordinary and the common. He makes fun of their stupid deeds and self-obsessed attentions. He has disguised that this society just leads to immorality and distraction between humans. Alas, in the end, all upper-class people stay empty-handed.

 It is serious that a woman’s hair is cut but she has rejected a lord and such crimes are frivolities and fun of life in ease of nobility.


4.    Female Desire and Passion:

Pope has made fun of women; they just think and are concerned about their beauty aids alone. He presents Belinda like an epic heroine. He symbolizes that this mock-heroic epic is Belinda’s maidenhood. Pope says that women do not have a fair chance because they are even more self-conscious and limited by society’s rules and regulations than men are. Clarissa’s speech is a fine example of this attitude and also deals with the situation ideally with a smile rather than do anything to change it. Women, in the poem, are illustrated as being more in control of society than men are. 

It is obvious to us that if you put a bunch of attractive, well-off, and bored young men and women together. They will get attracted to one another, feel desire for one another, have dreams about one another; maybe they even fell in love. Pope depicts in The Rape of the Lock the trouble with the society is absolutely threatening and no way for anyone in it to safely express or act on his or her sexuality, desire, lust, life, feelings or love.

5.    Theme of Love in Rape of the Lock:

Pope thinks that love has no importance for the characters in this poem. For the Alexander Pope, the upper class believes only in victory and defeat. Love has no value in their unthinking minds. Belinda meets with a smile but yields and bow down to none. The poem has also symbolized Belinda’s character as a strong modern woman, who loves her beauty more than anything else. Baron loved to have an affair but without feelings and pure attention, it would be considered a victory. The society portrayed in The Rape of the Lock seems constructed to deny each other’s real feelings. For them, live-in relationships were common, but love in those relationships was counted as something odd.

 6.    Theme of Pride in Rape of the Lock:

Pride is also one of the major themes in the Rape of the Lock. We can say that the pride of a woman is natural to her, never sleeps, until modesty is gone. Beauty can be without pride and our dear Belinda handles it best of all. She takes care that no one would go without looking at her with a full glance. Baron decides to take revenge on Belinda by stripping her beloved lock of hair. Baron tried to get Belinda by force but not by marrying her, he tried to win over her but failed. As Belinda’s pride, self-respect and beauty were more important for her than anything else.  

The Rape of the Lock, reveals that the central concerns of the poem is pride, at least for women like Belinda and other social ones found in that society. Pope wants us to recognize that if Belinda has shown all her typical female weakness, then that would be against her pride, partly it is because she has been educated and trained to act in this way. The society as a whole community is as much to blame as she is or the men free from this judgment.












 

 





Assignment 210 Dessertation Conclusion

 Paper - 210 Name - Nehalba Gohil Roll no - 15  Topic :- Feminist Approach in Kamala Das's Poems  Enrollment no - 4069206420210009 Email...