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Colonial America prose and poetry.doc
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The Dunciad

The Dunciad expresses Pope's deep dismay concerning the feared loss of Britain's literary, cultural and ethical inheritance. Pope takes this idea, of the personified goddess of Dulness being at war with reason, darkness at war with light, and extends it to a full Aeneid parody. His poem celebrates a war, rather than a mere victory, and a process of ignorance, and Pope picks as his champion of all things insipid Lewis Theobald and Colley Cibber. (Theobald was Pope’s nemesis in editing Shakespeare. Cibber was Pope’s poetic nemesis who because laureate over Pope.)

The poem was loosely modelled on Dryden's MacFlecknoe, but where Dryden's poem was a lampoon of 217 lines attacking a single person, Thomas Shadwell, Pope's was a more fully developed satirical anti-epic, attacking all those who had slandered him over many years, in a poem more than four times the length.

“Eloisa to Abelard”

It is an Ovidian heroic epistle inspired by the 12th century story of Eloisa's (Heloise's) illicit love for, and secret marriage to, her teacher Pierre Abélard, perhaps the most popular teacher and philosopher in Paris, and the brutal vengeance her family exacts when they castrate him, not realizing that the lovers had married.

It is from this poem that the title for the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind comes.

“To a Lady”

Although the target of the satire appears at first to be aristocratic and wealthy women, the venom that Pope expends upon them clearly spreads to encompass women as a sex. For readers today Pope's text, like Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew, presents serious problems of interpretation. Whereas in his other satires Pope targets either particular vices, or particular individuals, in An Epistle To A Lady he attacks the entire female sex. Paradoxically his misogyny weakens rather than strengthens his satire.

The “Lady” to whom it is addressed, and whom it praises so glowingly at the end, was Pope's closest female friend, Martha Blount

Epistle II begins: NOTHING so true as what you once let fall, "Most Women have no Characters at all." Matter too soft a lasting mark to bear, And best distinguish'd by black, brown, or fair.

Joseph Addison & Richard Steel

Together they began and ran the periodical The Spectator and its predecessor, The Tatler. The Spectator was published between March of 1711 and December of 1712, and was a pioneering innovation of its times. Each issue consisted of one long essay. The Spectator was one of the first literary endeavors to make a deliberate effort to appeal to a female readership.

Addison and Steele might appear on the exam, but you will not need to be able to identify a passage of theirs. They are notable mostly for their historical significance.

Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)

Swift is considered the foremost prose satirist in the English language, although he is also well known for his poetry and essays. Gulliver’s Travels will appear on your exam, and A Modest Proposal is highly likely, as are some of Swift's poems.

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