The Rape of the Lock" as a mock-Epic
Question: Consider the poem ‘The Rape of the Lock’ as a mock-epic.
Answer: Mock
epic is a narrative poem that aims at mockery and laughter by using almost all
the characteristic features of an epic but for a trivial subject. Alexander
Pope’s “The Rape of the Lock” is a famous mock-epic. In it, there is an invocation to Muses, the proposition of subject, battles, supernatural machinery,
journey on water, underworld journey, long speeches, feasts (coffee house),
Homeric similes and grand style but all for a simple family dispute instead of
a national struggle. The grand treatment of a low subject produces hilarious
laughter and makes the story more ridiculous.
Firstly,
“Paradise Lost” a long epic poem by John Milton begins with the proposition of
justification of God’s way to a man with a nice invocation to the Muses. And
another epic poem titled “The Faerie Queene” by Edmund Spenser follows the same
manner. The subject matters in both of the epic poems are grand. Like the epic poems,
the poem “The Rape of the Lock” opens with the proposition of the subject
matter and Pope’s invocation to the Muses to help him compose the literary art.
Such a grand treatment of a trivial subject matter like the clipping of the
lock of Belinda provokes laughter when the poet says:
“I sing –
this verse to Caryll, Muse! Is due:
This even
Belinda may vouchsafe to view:”
Secondly, in
“The Iliad”’, Homer describes in considerable detail the armour and weaponry of
the great Achilles, as well as the battlefield trappings of other heroes. In
the poem “The Rape of the Lock” Pope describes Belinda preparing herself with
combs and pins – with "Puffs, Powders, Patches" – nothing that
"Now awful Beauty puts on all its Arms." This is nothing but funny.
Thirdly, the
ritual sacrifices the Baron performs in the pre-dawn hours are another
mock-heroic element of the poem, mimicking the epic tradition of sacrificing to
the gods before an important battle or journey, and drapes his project with an
absurdly grand import that actually only exposes its triviality. The fact that
he discards all his other love tokens in these preparations reveals his
capriciousness as a lover. Earnest prayer, in this parody scene, is replaced by
the self-indulgent sighs of the lover.
“Then prostrate
falls and begs with ardent eyes
Soon to
obtain and long possess the prize:”
Fourthly, an epic poem must contain episodes also. In keeping with this practice, Pope has
introduced the episodes of the game of Omber which suggests the mighty battle
and the cards imply the soldiers described in great detail. Then there is the
battle between the lords and ladies just like the battles in epic poetry. But
in true mock-heroic style, this battle is fought with fans and snuff instead of
with swords and spears. There are single combats also between Belinda and the
Baron and between Clarissa and Sir Plume. This symbolises nothing but a battle
of sexual perversion near Hampton Court just the opposite to the mighty battles
that we find in “The Aneid” and in “The Faerie Queene” Red Cross Knight’s
battle with the monster Error.
Fifthly,
another vital element of an epic poem is the active participation of
supernatural machinery just as Aphrodite, the goddess of beauty, who rescues
Aeneas in “The Iliad” when he is attacked by Diomedes. In “The Rape of the
lock”, there are the sylphs and gnomes. These aerial spirits are small and
insignificant things, and are, therefore, exactly in keeping with the
triviality of the theme. They guard the person of the heroine and when there is a fight between the followers of Belinda and those of the Baron, they take part
in the fight, like gods and goddesses in the Trojan War. Pope has described the
protecting sylphs under Ariel. In that, the sylphs are the parodies of epic
deities.
Sixthly, a
long perilous journey on the water is a must in an epic. But here in the poem
Belinda takes a comfortable journey on the water without any tension and peril. She
travels up the Thames in a boat to join Hampton Court to play the game of Omber
adorning her attractively.
Seventhly,
it is another important event of epic to take an underworld journey. It is
generally done in order to take some effective pieces of advice from the lower
world, Hades. Like supernatural beings in classical epics, a gnome named
Umbriel descends to the Underworld on Belinda’s behalf and obtains a bag of
sighs and a vial of tears from the Queen of Spleen. With these magical gifts,
he means to comfort poor Belinda. First, he empties the bag on her instead.
The reversal of the epic quality is nothing but mocking in tone.
“Repair’d to
search the gloomy cave of Spleen.
Swift on his
sooty pinions flits the gnome,”
Eighthly,
the mock-heroic character of the poem is perceived in the very title. Rape is a
serious moral offence which means the violation of a woman’s chastity by force.
It also refers to the seizure of a lady by some ruffians in a grossly inhuman
manner. In any case, rape is a grave crime, affecting the social decency of a
human being. Pope has used this term in an amusing manner. The possession of
the hair of Belinda by the Baron is described by him in a mock vein. The title
evokes nothing but the mock-heroic sensation and well indicates the mock-heroic character of Pope’s work.
Ninthly,
Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, and Virgil's Aneid all end happily for their
respective heroes, though perhaps at the expense of their enemies. Pope, wisely
following his own advice, likewise concludes the poem with a mocking
consolation to Belinda that:
"This
lock, the Muse shall consecrate to fame,
And midst
the stars inscribe Belinda's name!"
Pope's ending is just one example of how he mocks society through epic form, as well
as mocks earlier literary works. A lock of hair is a ridiculous object to
eternally memorialize.
From the above
discussion, it becomes clear that Pope follows the epic conventions of Homer,
Dante and Virgil very minutely but for trivial a matter and he has heightened
the title, exalted the insignificant, in order to make the little and the
insignificant look more ridiculous. He employs the mock-heroic form, not to
mock the epic form, but to show the triviality of mean things by contrasting
them with great things. This is the true mock-heroic style. So it can be
undoubtedly said that the poem “The Rape of the Lock” is a successful
mock-epic.