The static intrinsic birefringence and dichroism of dense assemblies of tethered chains, or "brushes", are computed. The classical trajectory analogy is used to calculate the average segmental anisotropy for strongly-stretched chains, as a function of distance from the grafting surface. This result is used to estimate the birefringence and dichroism of planar polymer brushes and strongly-segregated block copolymer lamellae and cylinders. The birefringence, DELTAn, varies as the ratio L2/M[h2]0, where L is the layer thickness, M the chain length, and [h2]0 the mean-square unperturbed end-to-end distance. Consequently, DELTAn is predicted to be independent of M for tethered chains where L approximately M; however, for block copolymers in the strong-segregation limit, An approximately M-0.67. For lamellar block copolymers, the calculations indicate that the intrinsic birefringence is surprisingly large and, for the most commonly-examined chemical systems, is often comparable to, or even greater than, the estimated form birefringence. This result reflects the orientation of the chains, i.e., the tendency of the block end-to-end vectors to be aligned, more than stretching. Calculations are also performed for labeled sections of a tethered chain, which indicate that it should be possible to assess the validity of the classical trajectory assumption via infrared dichroism measurements on appropriately deuterated samples.