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The Rape of the Lock Alexander Pope
Canto 1
Summary
The Rape of the Lock begins with a passage outlining the subject of the
poem and invoking the aid of the muse. Then the sun ("Sol") appears to initiate
the leisurely morning routines of a wealthy household. Lapdogs shake themselves
awake, bells begin to ring, and although it is already noon, Belinda still
sleeps. She has been dreaming, and we learn that the dream has been sent by
"her guardian Sylph," Ariel. The dream is of a handsome youth who tells her
that she is protected by "unnumber'd Spirits"--an army of supernatural beings
who once lived on earth as human women. The youth explains that they are the
invisible guardians of women's chastity, although the credit is usually
mistakenly given to "Honour" rather than to their divine stewardship. Of these
Spirits, one particular group--the Sylphs, who dwell in the air--serve as
Belinda's personal guardians; they are devoted, lover-like, to any woman that
"rejects mankind," and they understand and reward the vanities of an elegant and
frivolous lady like Belinda. Ariel, the chief of all Belinda's puckish
protectors, warns her in this dream that "some dread event" is going to befall
her that day, though he can tell her nothing more specific than that she should
"beware of Man!" Then Belinda awakes, to the licking tongue of her lapdog,
Shock. Upon the delivery of a billet-doux, or love-letter, she forgets all
about the dream. She then proceeds to her dressing table and goes through an
elaborate ritual of dressing, in which her own image in the mirror is described
as a "heavenly image," a "goddess." The Sylphs, unseen, assist their charge as
she prepares herself for the day's activities.
Commentary
The opening of the poem establishes its mock-heroic style. Pope introduces the
conventional epic subjects of love and war and includes an invocation to the
muse and a dedication to the man (the historical John Caryll) who commissioned
the poem. Yet the tone already indicates that the high seriousness of these
traditional topics has suffered a diminishment. The second line confirms in
explicit terms what the first line already suggests: the "am'rous causes" the
poem describes are not comparable to the grand love of Greek heroes but rather
represent a trivialized version of that emotion. The "contests" Pope alludes to
will prove to be "mighty" only in an ironic sense. They are card-games and
flirtatious tussles, not the great battles of epic tradition. Belinda is not,
like Helen of Troy, "the face that launched a thousand ships" (see the SparkNote
on The Iliad), but rather a face that--although also beautiful--
prompts a lot of foppish nonsense. The first two verse-paragraphs emphasize the
comic inappropriateness of the epic style (and corresponding mind-set) to the
subject at hand. Pope achieves this discrepancy at the level of the line and
half-line; the reader is meant to dwell on the incompatibility between the two
sides of his parallel formulations. Thus, in this world, it is "little men" who
in "tasks so bold... engage"; and "soft bosoms" are the dwelling-place for
"mighty rage." In this startling juxtaposition of the petty and the grand, the
former is real while the latter is ironic. In mock-epic, the high heroic style
works not to dignify the subject but rather to expose and ridicule it.
Therefore, the basic irony of the style supports the substance of the poem's
satire, which attacks the misguided values of a society that takes small matters
for serious ones while failing to attend to issues of genuine importance.
With Belinda's dream, Pope introduces the "machinery" of the poem--the
supernatural powers that influence the action from behind the scenes. Here, the
sprites that watch over Belinda are meant to mimic the gods of the Greek and
Roman traditions, who are sometimes benevolent and sometimes malicious, but
always intimately involved in earthly events. The scheme also makes use of
other ancient hierarchies and systems of order. Ariel explains that women's
spirits, when they die, return "to their first Elements." Each
female personality type (these types correspond to the four humours) is
converted into a particular kind of sprite. These gnomes, sylphs, salamanders,
and nymphs, in turn, are associated with the four elements of earth, air, fire,
and water. The airy sylphs are those who in their lifetimes were "light
Coquettes"; they have a particular concern for Belinda because she is of this
type, and this will be the aspect of feminine nature with which the poem is most
concerned.
Indeed, Pope already begins to sketch this character of the "coquette" in this
initial canto. He draws the portrait indirectly, through characteristics of the
Sylphs rather than of Belinda herself. Their priorities reveal that the central
concerns of womanhood, at least for women of Belinda's class, are social ones.
Woman's "joy in gilded Chariots" indicates an obsession with pomp and
superficial splendor, while "love of Ombre," a fashionable card game, suggests
frivolity. The erotic charge of this social world in turn prompts another
central concern: the protection of chastity. These are women who value above
all the prospect marrying to advantage, and they have learned at an early age
how to promote themselves and manipulate their suitors without compromising
themselves. The Sylphs become an allegory for the mannered conventions that
govern female social behavior. Principles like honor and chastity have become
no more than another part of conventional interaction. Pope makes it
clear that these women are not conducting themselves on the basis of abstract
moral principles, but are governed by an elaborate social mechanism--of which
the Sylphs cut a fitting caricature. And while Pope's technique of employing
supernatural machinery allows him to critique this situation, it also helps to
keep the satire light and to exonerate individual women from too severe a
judgment. If Belinda has all the typical female foibles, Pope wants us to
recognize that it is partly because she has been educated and trained to act in
this way. The society as a whole is as much to blame as she is. Nor are men
exempt from this judgment. The competition among the young lords for the
attention of beautiful ladies is depicted as a battle of vanity, as "wigs with
wigs, with sword-knots sword-knots strive." Pope's phrases here expose an
absurd attention to exhibitions of pride and ostentation. He emphasizes
the inanity of discriminating so closely between things and people that are
essentially the same in all important (and even most unimportant) respects.
Pope's portrayal of Belinda at her dressing table introduces mock-heroic motifs
that will run through the poem. The scene of her toilette is rendered first as
a religious sacrament, in which Belinda herself is the priestess and her image
in the looking glass is the Goddess she serves. This parody of the religious
rites before a battle gives way, then, to another kind of mock-epic scene, that
of the ritualized arming of the hero. Combs, pins, and cosmetics take the place
of weapons as "awful Beauty puts on all its arms."
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