Question

Though predecessors in other languages included La secchia rapita (“la SECK-yah ra-PEE-ta”) by Alessandro Tassoni, the first work of this type in English is usually said to be Samuel Butler’s Hudibras. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this type of long poem that satirizes a trivial subject using elevated diction and epithets. English examples of poems in this two-word style include John Gay’s Trivia and The Dunciad.
ANSWER: mock-epic [or mock-heroic; accept heroi-comic]
[10e] This mock-epic opens by describing a “dire offence [which] from am’rous causes springs.” Sylphs led by Ariel fail to prevent the removal of Belinda’s hair in this poem by Alexander Pope.
ANSWER: The Rape of the Lock
[10h] This mock-epic by a different author begins with the title character, “pond’ring which of all his sons was fit / To reign, and wage immortal war with wit,” soon settling on a man who is “mature in dullness” and “stands confirm’d in full stupidity.”
ANSWER: Mac Flecknoe (by John Dryden)
<Liberty A, British Literature>

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California2025-02-01Y323.33100%100%33%
Florida2025-02-01Y316.6767%67%33%
Great Lakes2025-02-01Y621.67100%83%33%
Midwest2025-02-01Y625.00100%83%67%
North2025-02-01Y316.6767%67%33%
Northeast2025-02-01Y514.0080%40%20%
Overflow2025-02-01Y520.00100%80%20%
South Central2025-02-01Y215.00100%50%0%
Southeast2025-02-01Y420.00100%75%25%
UK2025-02-01Y1016.0090%60%10%
Upper Mid-Atlantic2025-02-01Y818.75100%75%13%
Upstate NY2025-02-01Y36.6767%0%0%

Data

Florida AFlorida State A10101030
Florida BValencia A0000
UCF CUCF B1010020