Alexander Pope; Tradition and IdentityThe author's main concern is the interaction of Pope's growing sense of his own identity with his admiration and emulation of great writers of the past. He sympathetically portrays basic biographical facts that contributed to Pope's identity as man and as poet, among them his physical deformity, his constant illnesses, his subjection to anti-Catholic bias, and his political alienation. |
Contents
The Pantheon of Literature | 1 |
neoclassical dilemma concordia discors resolution | 25 |
Homer and the Heroic Ideal | 83 |
Copyright | |
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Achilles Aeneid Alexander Pope Ancients Arbuthnot Augustan Bolingbroke Caryll Catholic Clarendon Press classical Corr couplet death Dryden dunces Dunciad early edition Eloisa Eloisa to Abelard English epic Epistle Epistle to Augustus Epistle to Dr Essay on Criticism ev'n ev'ry fire genius glory Greek hero heroic ideal Homer Horace Horace's Horatian human humanist I. A. Richards Iliad imitation immortal John John Caryll Johnson Lady Mary later letter lines literary live London Lord metaphor Milton mind moral Muse Nature never Oxford passage passion Pastorals perhaps poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Pope wrote Pope's praise Rackett Renaissance retired Reuben Brower Sarpedon satire Scriblerus Scriblerus Club sense Sherburn soul spirit Swift Temple of Fame theme things thought tion tradition trans translation Trumbull Twickenham University Press verse Virgil Virtue Voiture Whig Windsor Forest writes Wycherley young