What
is mock-heroic epic?
A mock-heroic epic is a
poem which uses a formal and grand style to describe a trivial or common
subject for which this style is not suitable. This leads to a comic effect
since the style of the mock poem is mismatched with the subject. Rape of the
lock is one of the best examples of mock-heroic epics. In mock heroic poetry,
the central character is not brave and adventurous unlike in heroic epic. The
lofty and hyperbolic language is used in mock heroic epic to describe a trivial
or a common matter in a satiric or ridiculous way.
Objects
of Satire:
Pope makes
it quite clear at the very outset that his poem is a mocking one, when he
promises us a narrative of towering anger and conflict springing
from “amorous causes”. The poem is prompted by an occasion involving
actual people and invokes the Greek Muse. Thus, the poem has a social, as well
as a literary context. However, whereas Homer’s or Virgil’s subjects were grand,
Pope’s the Rape of the Lock is the trivial cutting off of a lock of a
maiden’s hair. The object of the poem, therefore, is civilized mockery and it
implies a criticism. Mockery, however, is double-edged. Pope hits two subjects
simultaneously, the great epic form, the last of whose manifestation was
Milton’s Paradise Lost and life itself, the characters, the well-bred Lord, the
gentle belle, Sir Plume. The laughter evoked promises to be silvery and urbane,
and yet the fierceness of the verb assault belies this assertion.
Both
Literary and Moral satire:
The occasion of the
writing of the poem was a quarrel between two families over the cutting off a
lock of hair of a girl by a Lord. It was a request to Pope to write a poem to
make the two families laugh it away. Pope, when he undertook the composition of
the poem, had this primary aim but literary satire and moral satire followed
quite naturally. Pope’s purpose was a moral one, he held women’s freaks,
humors, spleen and vanity to be responsible for much discord, and he inserted a
speech by Clarissa on purpose to point the moral.
Pope’s iVein Compared with
Others:
The mockery of the mock
heroic is as old as epic itself. We begin with Aristophanes and
pass-through Don Quixote and Bioleau’s Lutrin. Nun’s
Priest’s Tale in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales is also in the same
vein. Pope, therefore, was not attempting anything new but was improving on
what had already been done. He tried to produce something better by pushing the
same principles to their logical conclusion of completeness, proportion,
delicacy, and homogeneity.
The
Machinery Used in Mock-Heroic Epic:
The Rape of the Lock is
the masterpiece of the mock heroic as it mocks at the maximum amount of the
epic. The mockery takes different forms and employs different devices. Apart
from the general mockery of the epic form, in its similes, and the epic matter
with its machinery, its battles, its journeys on water and down to the
underworld, its harangues, there is particular mockery of a detail. There is a
certain speech or a comment in the person of the poet. Also, the scale of
mimicry is always varying. We find Belinda flashing lightning from her eyes,
screaming like the Homeric heroes but against the bulk of Hector, she is only a
girl, a mere fashionable lady. We find altar at which ardent prayers are
fatefully half-granted. In addition, people worship a goddess.
However, the altar is
built of French romances and the goddess is the image of the vain Belinda, in
the mirror of her dressing table. We find a battle drawn forth to combat, like
the Greeks on velvet plain, but it is only a game of cards on a fashionable
card table. We find a supernatural being threatening his inferiors with torture
but it is a sylph, not Jove. Moreover, the tortures are neither thunderbolts
nor pains of Hades, but cruelties devised ingeniously fan the requisites of the
toilet table.
The terms of the
emulation never stay the same. However, over all they are reduced with time.
Where The Rape of the Lock is a short poem, the epic is long. The
time line of the epic portraits years, whereas The Rape of the
Lock only cover hours. The gods of the epic are stupendous creatures.
Pope’s sylphs are tiny and ineffectual.
The
Use of Spiritual Machinery in Mock-Heroic Epic:
Pope thought the first
version incomplete without the spiritual machinery. No doubt, he had already
made the action of his poem, taking place on the knees of the gods. It was
Heaven and the powers, which, granting half the Baron’s prayers, wrested from
his fingers the lock they had allowed him to cut. But from the start, it must
have been obvious to Pope that the epics usually allotted their heavenly
creatures more room and color than his own poem did, and his literary mockery
kept increasing in quality according to the supernatural machinery’s quantity.
When it was time for additions in the poem, it had to be ranged from a single
couplet to passages of hundred lines. Pope knew that he could not just add the
character of sylphs. He would have to cleverly develop and create their role to
make it work in the poem.
Mockery
— both Human and Literacy:
The additions made were
for improving the literary mockery; they were also helpful in the improvement
of human mockery. The chief excellence of the satire, afforded by the
additions, consists in the way they mock human and literary matters
simultaneously. We can see how obvious it is in every way. Pope could not let
the sylphs affect the central action of a poem, which was still complete if
they were not involved. He, therefore, makes them to desire to affect it, to
only be prevented from doing so by force within the poem itself. Belinda
herself renders them powerless. Her would-be protector Ariel has warned her
that trouble is ahead, but his help is important when she transgresses the very
condition, which gives him power.
Didactic
Purpose of Rape of the Lock as a Mock-Heroic Epic:
The Rape of the
Lock is indeed a magnificent magnum opus whose design is subtly laid so
that there is a condensation of meaning, and layers of underlay enhance the
pleasure of discovery by the discerning reader. Pope’s aim was correction of
the foibles and follies of the artificial society by making them laugh at
themselves. He tried purging them of the dress so that their innate purity may
shine. It is certain that Pope did not lose hope in humanity and was conscious
of man’s innate goodness.
What is mock-heroic epic?
A mock-heroic epic may be a poem which uses a
proper and grand style to explain a trivial or common subject that this style is
not suitable. This results in a comic book effect since the design of the mock
poem is mismatched with the topic. Rape of the lock is one among the simplest
samples of mock-heroic epics. In mock epic poetry, the central character is not
brave and adventurous unlike in heroic epic. The lofty and hyperbolic language
is employed in mock heroic epic to explain a trivial or a standard matter
during a satiric or ridiculous way.
Objects of Satire:
Pope makes it quite clear
at the very outset that his poem may be a mocking one, when he promises us a
narrative of towering anger and conflict springing from “amorous causes”. The
poem is prompted by an event involving actual people and invokes the Greek
Muse. Thus, the poem features a social, also as a literary context. However,
whereas Homer’s or Virgil’s subjects were grand, Pope’s the Rape of the Lock is
that the trivial isolating of a lock of a maiden’s hair. The object of the
poem, therefore, is civilized mockery and it implies a criticism. Mockery,
however, is double-edged. Pope hits two subjects simultaneously, the good epic
form, the last of whose manifestation was Milton’s Paradise Lost and life
itself, the characters, the well-bred Lord, the gentle belle, Sir Plume. The
laughter evoked promises to be silvery and urbane, and yet the fierceness of
the verb assault belies this assertion.
Both Literary and Moral satire:
The occasion of the
writing of the poem was a quarrel between two families over the isolating a
lock of hair of a woman by a Lord. It was an invitation to Pope to write down a
poem to form the 2 families laugh it away. Pope, when he undertook the
composition of the poem, had this primary aim but literary satire and moral
satire followed quite naturally. Pope’s purpose was an ethical one, he held
women’s freaks, humours, spleen and vanity to be liable for much discord, and
he inserted a speech by Clarissa intentionally to point the moral.
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