At the end of the poem what happens to the lock of belinda's hair
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Toward the end of the poem, the lock of Belinda's hair transformed into a heavenly body or into a constellation.
"The Rape of the Lock" is a deride epic or a "heroicomical poem" as Pope depicts it in the epigraph. The poem uses the shape, tone, and earnestness frequently held for veritable legends which are generally in view of noteworthy battles, for example, war (The Illiad) or the fight amongst good and evil (Paradise Lost).
A deride epic uses these tropes however the subject isn't as pompous. This is a fight/contention amongst men and ladies. The tone is high and genuine, however, the topic is trifling.
"The Rape of the Lock" is a deride epic or a "heroicomical poem" as Pope depicts it in the epigraph. The poem uses the shape, tone, and earnestness frequently held for veritable legends which are generally in view of noteworthy battles, for example, war (The Illiad) or the fight amongst good and evil (Paradise Lost).
A deride epic uses these tropes however the subject isn't as pompous. This is a fight/contention amongst men and ladies. The tone is high and genuine, however, the topic is trifling.
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Toward the end of the poem, the lock of Belinda's hair transformed into a heavenly body or into a constellation. "The Rape of the Lock" is a deride epic or a "heroicomical poem" as Pope depicts it in the epigraph. ... A deride epic uses these tropes however the subject isn't as pompous
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