Assault

okay so I have to be completely honest in saying that i’m not quite sure that i understand everything Pope is trying to say but i’m going to try my hardest to conjure up some semblance of a theory and present it to you hooligans. i vaguely remember reading this poem in high school but that means absolutely nothing considering i still don’t understand it today. anyway, in the very first cantos, Pope mentions that a good and respectful lord couldn’t possibly have the intent of harassing or assaulting a belle. first of all, no. i understand this is satirical and that he supposedly means the exact opposite but i honestly feel like this is one of those situations where he does think the things he is writing are actually true but he’s playing off as satirical writing so that he won’t be ostracized for his opinions. but anyway, the only thing i can think of while reading the first cantos is literally a major problem in today’s society which is that of rape. he says “o say what stranger cause, yet unexplor’d, could make a gentle belle reject a lord?” this is honestly bonkers because we hear so much of this same attitude today. “you were wearing that outfit which must mean you wanted me to make a move” or “the way you were looking at me or talking to me or blah blah blah” everyone just makes excuses for their own actions and Pope is essentially saying that women have no cause to turn down a lord, simply for the fact that he has male genitalia? because that is all i’m getting from this. so to conclude, women have every right to turn down a man if she wants to, men have every right not to be a perverted skippy, and Pope was probably one of the biggest creeps of his time period. thanks for coming to me Telfair talk.

Comments

Spencer Wood said…
yeah, Pope is gross. and I hate that we see so much of his "satire" in real, documented history. also, I'm grateful that we read Wollstonecraft before we read Pope.
Hailey Morgan said…
Gray, I literally relate to the entire beginning of your post. I was entirely lost with this one. I don't know why "The Rape of the Lock" was so hard for me to swallow, but it was!

I totally agree with you on the whole, "You were wearing that outfit which must mean you wanted me to make a move," comment. Remarks like that are the reason why rape victims are so hesitant to seek help. Everything makes it seem as though it was their fault, that it was by their own actions the crime took place.
Stephen Davis said…
I agree that the pope was a pretty messed up individual who most likely just used a satirical platform to reveal his true emotions. However, this is also one of the hardest reads that I have had to read thus far as I had a hard time understanding it.
abbiehedden said…
Gray, I love your post and completely agree with it! Oscar Wilde said "Give a man a mask, and he'll tell you the truth." I think this is true for Pope. He wrote under the pretense of satire while really just mocking women and vetting for the whole "women deserve it if they look pretty!" but also "women are worthless without their looks" mindset. Very disgusting of him.