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The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic poem written by Alexander Pope and published in May 1717. The poem is based on an incident involving Arabella Fermor and her suitor, possibly Lord Petre. During a visit, the suitor asks for and then took ("raped") a lock of hair from Arabella. Pope refigures Arabella as Belinda and introduces an entire system of "sylphs," or guardian spirits of virgins, and creates an epic out of a petty squabble.
The humor of the poem comes from the juxtaposition of this tempest in a teapot of vanity with the elaborate, formal verbal structure of an epic poem. When the Baron, for example, goes to snip the lock of hair, Pope says,
In effect, Pope inflates the already over-blown passions to show just how silly it all is.
The poem was very well received and helped cement Pope's reputation as the foremost poet of his age.
Two moons of Uranus are named for spirits in The Rape of the Lock - Ariel and Umbriel.