the sophisticated idiom of the new intellectual world, and, at its most remarkable moments, spoke even with heroic and vatic accent.
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Of the forms and devices of Dryden's and Pope's poetry, the heroic couplet is the most characteristic. Virtually everything they wrote, they wrote in coupletsincluding in Dryden's case, many plays. The versatility of their handling of this instrument revealed in it a capacity for suppleness hardly to be guessed at from the apparent rigidities of the form itself. These are not merely a matter of the inevitable rhymealthough it is important to note that in their practice, Dryden and Pope for the most part emphasize the rhymes and insist upon strong pauses at the line's end. At their best, they do so without loss of fluid movement and without blunting dramatic and discursive energy.
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Of all the devices that distinguish poetry from discursive writing, likeness of sound has perhaps the least to do with thought itself; yet as Dryden and Pope manage it, the rhyming couplet will emphasize grammar and syntax, and through grammar and syntax it will suggest the operations of thought. It is a fine instrument for displaying discrimination, as Dryden does here in assessing his Achitophel: "Yet, Fame deserv'd, no Enemy can grudge; / The Statesman we abhor, but praise the Judge." It works brilliantly in defining the paradoxes of human character; again, Dryden's Zimri: "So over Violent, or over Civil, / That every man, with him, was God or Devil." And for the elegant brutality of realistic assessment, the couplet is unsurpassed:
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| | See how the World its Veterans rewards! A Youth of Frolicks, an old Age of Cards, Fair to no purpose, artful to no end, Young without Lovers, old without a Friend, A Fop their Passion, but their Prize a Sot, Alive, ridiculous, and dead, forgot!
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The preceding passage, taken from Pope's Epistle to a Lady (once again, a poem he thought of as a "moral essay"), describes the behavior of middle-aged unmarried women, and explains how they came to their condition. What is striking in this satire of social and moral failure is the almost entire absence of figurative languageof image, of metaphor, of simile. Submerged in "Veteran" is a metaphor, perhaps, suggesting combat as well as age, and this suggestion tells us something about the "World" within which these women movethe social existence that, when vitiated, is a warfare upon earth, dealing out rewards
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