search
Get Started
search
Alexander Pope - Poet
zoom_in Click to enlarge

Alexander Pope

description Alexander Pope Overview

Alexander Pope was an English poet and satirist whose 1714 version of The Rape of the Lock exemplifies Augustan wit and heroic couplets.

help Alexander Pope FAQ

What happens in Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock?

The poem turns a society quarrel over a stolen lock of hair into a mock-epic adventure. Pope's expanded 1714 version uses heroic couplets, sylphs, card games, and battle language to satirize aristocratic manners.

Why is Pope so associated with heroic couplets?

Pope mastered rhymed iambic pentameter couplets, using them for wit, balance, and sharp moral judgment. Works such as An Essay on Criticism and The Dunciad show how tightly he could compress argument into paired lines.

What was Pope's relationship to Homer?

Pope translated Homer's Iliad and Odyssey into English heroic couplets in the early 18th century. The Iliad translation was a major financial and literary success and helped secure his independence as a writer.

Why was Alexander Pope involved in so many literary feuds?

Pope wrote satire in a competitive London print culture where critics, publishers, and rival writers attacked one another publicly. The Dunciad turned many of those quarrels into a large comic poem about bad writing and cultural decline.

Reviews & Comments

Write a Review

rate_review

Be the first to review

Share your thoughts with the community and help others make better decisions.

Save to your list

Save your favorites and follow how their scores change over time.

Save favorites
Get updates
Compare scores

Already have an account? Sign in

Compare Items

See how they stack up against each other

Comparing
VS
Select 1 more item to compare