Long narrative poems on heroic subjects mark the best work of classical
Greek (Homer's Iliad and Odyssey) and Roman (Virgil's Æneid) poetry. John
Milton (1608-1674) who was Cromwell's secretary, set out to write a great
biblical epic, unsure whether to write in Latin or English, but settling for the
latter in Paradise Lost. John Dryden (1631-1700) also wrote epic poetry, on
classical and biblical subjects. Though Dryden's work is little read today it
leads to a comic parody of the epic form, or mock-heroic. The best poetry of
the mid 18th century is the comic writing of Alexander Pope (1688-1744).
Pope is the best-regarded comic writer and satirist of English poetry. Among his many masterpieces, one of the more accessible is The Rape of the Lock
(seekers of sensation should note that "rape" here has its archaic sense of
"removal by force"; the "lock" is a curl of the heroine's hair). Serious poetry
of the period is well represented by the neo-classical Thomas Gray (1716-
1771) whose Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard virtually perfects the
elegant style favoured at the time.