Peter Davidson
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Pope’s recusancy
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This chapter asks and answers a question so simple that it is puzzling that it does not feature regularly in studies of the poet Alexander Pope: how did his lifelong Catholicism affect his life and work, since he lived under times of legal penalty for Catholics, made more stringent by the Jacobite threat? The answer is that he suffered a great deal from the restrictions of the laws against Roman Catholics, that they influenced the imagery of retirement and seclusion throughout his work, and that (in some respects) his best-known work, The Rape of the Locke, yields its meaning most readily if considered as a poem addressed to a beleaguered Catholic coterie.

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Relics, dreams, voyages

World baroque

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