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Alexander Pope (1688-1744)

 

English essayist, critic, satirist, and one of the greatest poets of Enlightenment. Alexander Pope wrote his first verses at the age of 12. His breakthrough work, An Essay on Criticism (1711) appeared when he was twenty-three. It included the famous line "a little learning is a dangerous thing." Pope's physical defects made him an easy target for heartless mockery, but he was also considered a leading literary critic and the epitome of English Neoclassicism.

"Whoever thinks a faultless piece to see,
Thinks what ne'er was, nor is, nor e'er shall be."

(from An Essay on Criticism)

Alexander Pope was born in London, the son of Alexander Pope, a Roman Catholic linen-merchant, and Edith (Turner) Pope, who was forty-four when Alexander, her only child, was born. Edith Pope belonged to a large Yorkshire family, which divided along Catholic and Protestant lines. His early years Pope spent at Binfield on the edge of Windsor Forest, and recalled this period as a golden age: "Thy forests, Windsor, and thy green retreats, / At once the monarch's and the Muse's seats, / Invite my lays. Be present, sylvan maids! Unlock your springs, and open all your shades." Anecdotes from Pope's life were deemed worthy of collecting during his lifetime. Joseph Spence, a critic, minor poet, and Pope's biographer, tells that Pope was "a child of a particularly sweet temper and had a great deal of sweetness in his look when he was a boy". Due to his melodious voice, he was nicknamed "the Little Nightingale".

Pope's father, the son of an Anglican vicar, had converted to Catholicism, which caused the family many problems. At the time Catholics suffered from repressive legislation and prejudices - they were not allowed to enter any universities or held public employment. Thus Pope had an uneven education, which was often interrupted. From Twyford School he was expelled after writing a satire on one of the teachers. At home, Pope's aunt taught him to read. Latin and Greek he learned from a local priest and later he acquired knowledge of French and Italian poetry. Pope also attended clandestine Catholic schools.

Most of his time Pope spend reading books from his father's library - he "did nothing but write and read," recalled his half-sister. While still at school, Pope wrote a play based on speeches from the Iliad. The works of Homer inspired him throughout his life. Samuel Johnson tells that Pope's early epic poem, called Alcander, was burned at the suggestion of Francis Atterbury, who was later exiled for treason in supporting the deposed Stuart monarchy. Pope had kept the manuscript for sixteen years after its creation.

In 1700, when his family moved to Binfield in Windsor Forest, Pope contracted tuberculosis. It was probably Pott's disease, a tubercular affection of the bones, which may have been transmitted through his wet-nurses milk, or through unpasteurized cow's milk. He also suffered from asthma and headaches, and his humpback was a constant target for his critics in literary battles - Pope was called a "hunchbacked toad". In middle age he was 4ft 6in tall and wore a stiffened canvas bodice to support his spine, which twisted like a question mark.

After moving to London, Pope published his first major work, An Essay on Criticism. This discussion was based on neoclassical doctrines and derived standards of taste from the order of nature: "Good nature and good sense must ever join; / To err is human, to forgive divine."

Before becoming one of the members of Scriblerus Club, Pope associated with anti-Catholic Whig friends, but by 1713 he had moved towards the Tories. His friends among Tory intellectuals included Jonathan Switft, Gay, Congreve, and Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford. In 1712 Pope published an early version of The Rape of the Lock, an elegant satire about the battle between the sexes, and follies of a young woman with her "puffs, powders, patches, Bibles, billet-doux." The poem was expanded in 1714. Its first version consisted of two cantos (1712) and the final version five cantos (1714). Rape of the Lock originated from a quarrel between two families with whom Pope was acquainted. The cause was not very small - the 7th Lord Petre cut off a lock of Miss Arabella Fermor's hair, and kept it as a trophy. Although Pope did not admit it, the title of the work was most likely influenced by Alessandro Tassoni's mock-epic The Rape of the Bucket, from 1622.

Pope's poem recounts the story of a young woman, Belinda. When she wakes up, Pope describes devotedly her exotic cosmetics and beauty aids. She plays cards, flirts, drinks coffee, and has a lock of hair stolen by an ardent young man. "The meeting points the sacred hair dissever / From the fair head, forever, and forever! / The flashed the living lightning from her eyes, / And screams of horror rend th' affrighted skies." For this trivial event Pope gives an extended mock heroic treatment which echoed the Iliad and the Aeneid, and at the same time comments ironically on the contemporary social world, high-society preoccupations, and perhaps suggests a reform. But in real life there was no reconcilation between Lord Petre and Arabella; Petre married another woman.

Pope admired Horace and Vergilius and valued them as models for poetry. His great achievements were the translations of Iliad and Odyssey into English. The success of the translations enabled him to move to Twickenham from anti-Catholic pressure of the Jacobites. However, Pope remained a Catholic even after the death of his father (d. 1717) and mother (d. 1733). Pope's collected works were published in 1717. He was one of the first professional poets to be self-sufficient as a result of his non-dramatic writings.

In Twickenham Pope to studied horticulture and landscape gardening. During his last years, Pope designed a romantic "grot" in a tunnel, which linked the waterfront with his back garden. It was walled with shells and pieces of mirror. Pope's villa, about fifteen miles from London, attracted also a number of writers, including Swift, whom Pope helped with the publication of Gulliver's Travels. With his neighbor, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Pope formed an attachment, but when the friendship cooled down, he started a life long relationship with Martha Blount. Pope had met Martha and her sister Teresa already in 1711. Later in his Imitations of Horace Pope referred to his former friend Lady Mary as "Sappho" and wrote: "Give me again my hollow tree, / A crust of bread, and liberty."

Pope's Essay on Man (1733) examined the human condition against Miltonic, cosmic background. Although the perspective is well above our everyday life, and Pope do not hide his wide knowledge, the dramatic work suggest than humankind is a part of nature and the diversity of living forms: "Each beast, each insect, happy in its own: / Is Heaven unkind to Man, and Man alone?" Pope separated in his Moral Essays behavior from character: "Not always actions show the man: we find / Who does a kindness is not therefore kind." Pope prepared an edition of his correspondence, doctored to his own advantage. He also employed discreditable artifices to make it appear that the correspondence was published against his wish. With the translation of the Odyssey, Pope was eager to take all the credit, trying to avoid mentioning the contribution of other writers.

In his time Pope was famous for his witty satires and aggressive, bitter quarrels with other writers. When his edition of William Shakespeare was attacked, he answered with the savage burlesque The Dunciad (1728), which was widened in 1742. It ridiculed bad writers, scientists, and every critic that ever had attacked him – Pope had kept copies of all the pamphlets and broadsheets that had mocked him. "While pensive poets painful vigils keep, / Sleepless themselves to give their readers sleep." Pope died on May 30, 1744. His property Pope left to Martha Blount. Before his death, Pope was delirious for a period of time, and he claimed to see an arm coming through the wall. Brutus, his last epic poem, was left unfinished. It was set sixty-six years after the fall of Troy, and followed the Trojan heroes on their quest from Gibraltar to Tenerife and from Lisbon to Britain.

With the growth of Romanticism Pope's poetry was increasingly seen as outdated and the "Age of Pope" ended. It was not until the 1930s when serious attempt was made to rediscover the poet's work.

 For further reading: Alexander Pope by Sir Leslie Stephen (1908); Alexander Pope by E. Sitwell (1930); The Early Career of Alexandr Pope by G. Sherburn (1934); New Light on Pope by A. Ault (1949); On the Poetry of Pope by G. Tillotson (1958); Essential Articles for the Study of Pope, ed. by M. Mack (1968); Alexander Pope: The Education of a Genius by P. Quennell (1968); Alexander Pope: The Critical Heritage, ed. by J. Barnard (1973); An Introduction to Pope by Y. Gooneratne (1976); The Art of Pope, ed. by H. Erskine-Hill and A. Smith (1979); Pope's Imagination by D. Fairer (1984); Alexander Pope: A Life by M. Mack (1985); Alexander Pope: A Literary Life by Felicity Rosslyn (1990); Approaches to Teaching Pope's Poetry, ed. by R. Paul Yoder (1993); Alexander Pope and His Eighteenth-Century Women Readers by Claudia N. Thomas (1994); Alexander Pope: The Critical Heritage, ed. by John Barnard (1995); Resemblance & Disgrace: Alexander Pope and the Deformation of Culture by Helen Deutsch (1996); A Contradiction Still: Representations of Women in the Poetry of Alexander Pope by Christa Knellwolf (1999); Alexander Pope by R. Quintero (1999); The Complete Critical Guide to Alexander Pope by Paul Baines (2001) - Museums: Pope's grotto and Pope's villa, Cross Deep, Twickenham, Middlesex. The grotto and garden are all that remains of Pope's villa.  Manor House and Pope's Tower, Stanton Harcourt, nr Withey. Pope translated there the fifth volume of Homer's Iliad - See also: Geoffrey Chaucer, John Gay

Selected works:

  • Pastorals, 1709
  • An Essay on Criticism, 1711
  • The Rape of the Lock:  An Heroi-Comical Poem: In Five Canto’s, 1712-14 (2nd ed., 1714)
  • The Temple of Fame: A Vision, 1713
  • A Key to the Lock. Or, A Treatise Proving, Beyond All Contradiction, the Dangerous Tendency of a Late Poem, Entituled, The Rape of the Lock, 1715 (2nd ed.)  
  • Homer's Iliad, 1715-20 (6 vols.; translator)
  • The Works of Mr. Alexander Pope, 1717
  • An Essay on Criticism, 1716 (5th ed.) 
  • Windsor-Forest. To the Right Honourable George, Lord Lansdown, 1720 (4th ed.)
  • Eloisa to Abelard, 1720 (2nd. ed.)
  • translation: Homer's Odyssey, 1726 (6 vols., translator; with William Broome and Elijah Fenton)
  • The Discovery: or, The Squire Turn'd Ferret, 1727 (the second edition)
  • Miscellanies in Prose and Verse, 1727 (with Jonathan Swift)
  • The Female Dunciad, Containing a Faithful Account of the Intrigues and Amours of Alexander Pope Written by Himself, 1728
  • The Dunciad, 1728 (widened in 1742)
  • The Sequel to the Dunciad, etc A Satire, 1729  
  • Of False Taste. An Epistle to the Right Honourable Richard Earl of Burlington, 1731 (3rd ed.)
  • Of the Use of Riches, An Epistle to the Right Honorable Allen Lord Bathurst, 1732
  • An Epistle to the Right Honorable Richard Lord Visct. Cobham, 1733
  • The First Satire of the Second Book of Horace, Imitated in a Dialogue Between Alexander Pope, 1733 (imitations of Horace, 1733-39) 
  • An Essay on Man: In epistles to a Friend, 1733
  • An Epitle from Mr. Pope, to Dr. Arbuthnot, 1734
  • Of the Characters of Women: An Epistle to a Lady, 1735
  • Mr. Pope’s Literary Correspondence for Thirty Years; from 1704 to 1734, 1735 (3 vols.)
  • Horace His Ode to Venus Lib IV Ode I Imitated by Mr Pope, 1737 
  • The Second Epistle of the Second Book of Horace Imitated by Mr Pope, 1737
  • The Sixth Epistle of the First book of Horace Imitated, 1737
  • Thoughts on Various Subjects, 1737
  •  The Letters of Alexander Pope, Esq., 1737 (second edition)
  • One Thousand Seven Hundred and Thirty Eight. A Dialogue Something Like Horace, 1738
  • One Thousand Seven Hundred and Thirty Eight. Dialogue II, 1738
  • The Universal Prayer, 1738
  • The New Dunciad: As It Was Found in the Year 1741, With the Illustrations of Scriblerus, and Notes Variorum, 1742
  • The Life of Alexander Pope, Esq, with a True Copy of His Last Will and Testament, 1744  
  • The Dunciad, Complete, in Four Books, According to Mr. Pope’s Last Improvements, 1749
  • Moral Essays, in Four Epistles to Several Persons, 1751  
  • The Works of Alexander Pope, Esq., 1751 (9 vols., with the commentaries and notes of Mr. Warburton)
  • The Messiah: A Sacred Eclogue, in Imitation of Virgil's Pollio, 1751
  • A Specimen of Scriblerus’s Reports, Stradling Versus Stiles, 1752
  • Four Ethic Epistles, 1754
  • An Essay on Man, 1760 (with notes by William Warberton)
  • Letters of the Late Alexander Pope, Esq., to a Lady, 1769
  • Memoirs of the Extraordinary Life, Works, and Discoveries of Martinus Scriblerus, 1770
  • The Works of Alexander Pope, Esq., 1776 (6 vols.)
  • The Odyssey of Homer. Translated by Alexander Pope, Esq, 1796 (5 vols., a new ed., with additional notes, critical and illustrative, by Gilbert Wakefield)
  • The Iliad of Homer. Translated by Alexander Pope, 1796 (6 vols., a new ed., with additional notes by Gilbert Wakefield)
  • The Works of Alexander Pope, 1871-89 (new ed., 10 vols.)
  • The Prose Works of Alexander Pope. Vol. I: The Earlier Works, 1711-1720, 1936 (edited by Norman Ault)
  • Poems, 1939-67 (10 vols., Twickenham ed.)
  • Memoirs of the Extraordinary Life, Works, and Discoveries of Martinus Scriblerus; Written in Collaboration by the Members of the Scriblerus Club: John Arbuthnot, Alexander Pope [and others], 1950 (edited by Charles Kerby-Miller)
  • Epistles to Several Persons (Moral Essays), 1951 (edited by F. W. Bateson)
  • Imitations of Horace, with An Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot and the Epilogue to the Satires, 1953 (2nd ed., edited by John Butt)
  • Correspondence, 1956 (5 vols.)
  • Letters, 1960 (selected and with an introd. by John Butt)
  • Epistles and Satires, 1961 (edited by Anthony Trott and Martin Axford)
  • Horatian Satires and Epistles, 1964 (edited by H.H. Erskine-Hill)
  • Literary Criticism of Alexaner Pope, 1965 (edited by Bertrand A. Goldgar)
  • Imitations of Horace, 1966
  • The Prose Works of Alexander Pope. Vol. I: The Earlier Works, 1711-1720, 1968 (edited by Norman Ault)
  • Poetry and Prose of Alexander Pope, 1969 (selected with an introd. and notes by Aubrey Williams)
  • Alexander Pope’s Collected Poems, 1975 (edited, with an introduction, by Bonamy Dobrée)
  • The Last and Greatest Art: Some Unpublished Poetical Manuscripts of Alexander Pope, 1984 (edited by Maynard MacK)
  • Selected Poetry, 1998 (edited with an introduction and notes by Pat Rogers)
  • Alexander Pope: Selected Letters, 2000 (edited by Howard Erskine-Hill)
  • The Major Works, 2006 (edited with an introduction and notes by Pat Rogers)


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