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The Rape of the Lock, and Other Poems of Alexander Pope: Edited With Notes and Introduction

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dc.contributor.author King, Elizabeth M.
dc.date.accessioned 2015-09-07T22:22:36Z
dc.date.available 2015-09-07T22:22:36Z
dc.date.issued 1905
dc.identifier.citation New York: The Macmillan Company, 1905 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/606
dc.description.abstract Excerpt from The Rape of the Lock, and Other Poems of Alexander Pope: Edited With Notes and Introduction By the beginning of the eighteenth century much had been accomplished by the poets of England: Chaucer had portrayed actual life, Spenser had revealed his rich imagination. Shakespeare had revealed in the ideal and the romantic, and Milton in the religious; but as yet no great poet had arisen to express the fashionable and conventional life which to England was a new phenomenon and the direct result of the infusion of French ideas and customs into the court of Charles II. It is because Pope became the exponent of this phase of English life that he became the literary autocrat of his own day, and even now occupies an important place in the history of English poetry. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher The Macmillan Company en_US
dc.subject Young women en_US
dc.subject Poetry en_US
dc.subject Pope en_US
dc.title The Rape of the Lock, and Other Poems of Alexander Pope: Edited With Notes and Introduction en_US
dc.type Book en_US


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