The Rape of the Lock: Does Pope Portray Belinda as a Goddess?
By Bhaskar Banerjee, published Nov 26, 2007
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Lord Petre had, in an amorous prank, cut off a lock of hair of a society beauty, Miss Arabella Fermor, to her great indignation. Out of this trivial incident, Pope makes an epic with Invocation, supernatural machinery, battles, and other epic paraphernalia. The Invocation is the conventional epic address to the Muse
Say, what strange motive, Goddess! Could compel
A well-bred lord to assault a gentle belle.
What was merely a social frivolity has acquired the lofty note of a classical epic. The slight digress being that whereas the world of epic poems was predominantly masculine, the world of the mock-epic The Rape of the Lock is feminine. The setting is the fashionable London society of the Augustan Age. The heroine, who is a type rather than a representation of Miss Fermor herself, is Belinda.
Her day starting at around noon, gives the poem its basic structure - her dream before waking, her toilet, her cruise up the Thames to Hampton Court, her card game, the outrageous clipping of her lock of hair, her hysterics, and the final battle to recover the lock.
Belinda is repeatedly compared to the sun. This suggests her brilliance and beauty as the central and focal point of her little world. It also suggests general munificence on her part, because, like the sun, her eyes "shine on all alike". It means either that she is shallow and flirtatious, or that she distributes her largess impartially like a great prince.
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