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  2. Alexander Pope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Pope

    Alexander Pope (21 May 1688 O.S. [1] – 30 May 1744) was an English poet, translator, and satirist of the Enlightenment era who is considered one of the most prominent English poets of the early 18th century.

  3. The Dunciad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dunciad

    The first version – the "three-book" Dunciad – was published in 1728 anonymously. The second version, the Dunciad Variorum, was published anonymously in 1729.The New Dunciad, in a new fourth book conceived as a sequel to the previous three, appeared in 1742, and The Dunciad in Four Books, a revised version of the original three books and a slightly revised version of the fourth book with ...

  4. Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epistle_to_Dr_Arbuthnot

    Portrait of Alexander Pope (ca. 1727) by Michael Dahl. According to Pope, the Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot was a satire "written piecemeal many years, and which I have now made haste to put together". The poem was completed by 3 September, when Pope wrote to Arbuthnot describing the poem as "the best Memorial that I can leave, both of my Friendship ...

  5. List of satirists and satires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_satirists_and_satires

    Land of the Dead, a satire of post-9/11 America state and of the Bush administration; The Wicker Man, a satire on cults and religion; The Great Dictator, a satire on Adolf Hitler; Monty Python's Life of Brian, a satire on miscommunication, religion and Christianity; The Player, a satire of Hollywood, directed by Robert Altman; In the Loop, a ...

  6. Three Hours After Marriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Hours_After_Marriage

    The play received seven sell-out performances, then a record for the Drury Lane theatre and influenced The Author's Farce.Critical reception was less friendly. Charles Johnson, in the preface to the published version of his The Sultaness called Three Hours "Long-labour'd Nonsense" and it was also attacked in Leonard Welsted's 1717 Palaemon to Caelia, or, The Triumvirate and in the Poetical ...

  7. Satire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satire

    His satirical Mac Flecknoe was written in response to a rivalry with Thomas Shadwell and eventually inspired Alexander Pope to write his satirical Dunciad. Alexander Pope (b. May 21, 1688) was a satirist known for his Horatian satirist style and translation of the Iliad. Famous throughout and after the long 18th century, Pope died in 1744. [104]

  8. Colley Cibber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colley_Cibber

    Alexander Pope made Cibber the ultimate hero of Dunciad. In the first version of his landmark literary satire Dunciad (1728), Pope referred contemptuously to Cibber's "past, vamp'd, future, old, reviv'd, new" plays, produced with "less human genius than God gives an ape". Cibber's elevation to laureateship in 1730 further inflamed Pope against him.

  9. The Rape of the Lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rape_of_the_Lock

    Arabella Fermor, a 19th-century print after Sir Peter Lely's portrait of her. The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope. [1] One of the most commonly cited examples of high burlesque, it was first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellaneous Poems and Translations (May 1712) in two cantos (334 lines); a revised edition "Written by Mr. Pope" followed in ...