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Paradise Lost

Paradise Lost is an epic poem in blank verse by the 17th-century English poet John Milton (1608–1674). The first version, published in 1667, consists of ten books with over ten thousand lines of verse. A second edition followed in 1674, arranged into twelve books (in the manner of Virgil's Aeneid) with minor revisions throughout.[1][2] It is considered to be Milton's masterpiece, and it helped solidify his reputation as one of the greatest English poets of all time.[3] The poem concerns the biblical story of the fall of man: the temptation of Adam and Eve by the fallen angel Satan and their expulsion from the Garden of Eden.

Paradise Lost
Title page of the first edition (1667)
AuthorJohn Milton
Cover artist
CountryEngland
LanguageEnglish
Genre
PublisherSamuel Simmons (original)
Publication date
1667
Media typePrint
Followed byParadise Regained 
TextParadise Lost at Wikisource
LibriVox recording by Owen. Book One, Part 1.

Composition edit

 
Milton Dictating to His Daughter, Henry Fuseli (1794)

In his introduction to the Penguin published edition of Paradise Lost, the Milton scholar John Leonard notes: "John Milton was nearly sixty when he published Paradise Lost in 1667. The biographer John Aubrey (1626–1697) tells us that the poem was begun in about 1658 and finished in about 1663. However, parts were almost certainly written earlier, and its roots lie in Milton's earliest youth."[4] Leonard speculates that the English Civil War interrupted Milton's earliest attempts to start his "epic [poem] that would encompass all space and time".[4]

Leonard also notes that Milton "did not at first plan to write a biblical epic".[4] Since epics were typically written about heroic kings and queens (and with pagan gods), Milton originally envisioned his epic to be based on a legendary Saxon or British king like the legend of King Arthur.[5][6]

Having gone blind in 1652, Milton wrote Paradise Lost entirely through dictation with the help of amanuenses and friends. He also wrote the epic poem while often ill, suffering from gout, and suffering emotionally after the early death of his second wife, Katherine Woodcock, in 1658, and their infant daughter.[7]

Publication edit

Milton's previous work had been printed by Matthew Simmons who was favoured by radical writers. However he died in 1654 and the business was then run by Mary Simmons. Milton had not published work with the Simmons printing business for twenty years. Mary was increasingly relying on her son Samuel to help her manage the business and the first book that Samuel Simmons registered for publication in his name was Paradise Lost in 1667.[8]

In the 1667 version of Paradise Lost, the poem was divided into ten books. However, in the 1674 edition, the text was reorganized into twelve books.[9] In later printing, "Arguments" (brief summaries) were inserted at the beginning of each book.[10]

Synopsis edit

 
Gustave Doré, The Heavenly Hosts, c. 1866, illustration to Paradise Lost.

The poem follows the epic tradition of starting in medias res (lit.'in the midst of things'), the background story being recounted later.

Milton's story has two narrative arcs, one about Satan (Lucifer) and the other, Adam and Eve. It begins after Satan and the other fallen angels have been defeated and banished to Hell, or, as it is also called in the poem, Tartarus. In Pandæmonium, the capital city of Hell, Satan employs his rhetorical skill to organise his followers; he is aided by Mammon and Beelzebub. Belial, Chemosh, and Moloch are also present. At the end of the debate, Satan volunteers to corrupt the newly created Earth and God's new and most favoured creation, Mankind. He braves the dangers of the Abyss alone, in a manner reminiscent of Odysseus or Aeneas. After an arduous traversal of the Chaos outside Hell, he enters God's new material World, and later the Garden of Eden.

At several points in the poem, an Angelic War over Heaven is recounted from different perspectives. Satan's rebellion follows the epic convention of large-scale warfare. The battles between the faithful angels and Satan's forces take place over three days. At the final battle, the Son of God single-handedly defeats the entire legion of angelic rebels and banishes them from Heaven. Following this purge, God creates the World, culminating in his creation of Adam and Eve. While God gave Adam and Eve total freedom and power to rule over all creation, he gave them one explicit command: not to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil on penalty of death.

The story of Adam and Eve's temptation and fall is a fundamentally different, new kind of epic:[further explanation needed] a domestic one. Adam and Eve are presented as having a romantic and sexual relationship while still being without sin. They have passions and distinct personalities. Satan, disguised in the form of a serpent, successfully tempts Eve to eat from the Tree by preying on her vanity and tricking her with rhetoric. Adam, learning that Eve has sinned, knowingly commits the same sin. He declares to Eve that since she was made from his flesh, they are bound to one another – if she dies, he must also die. In this manner, Milton portrays Adam as a heroic figure, but also as a greater sinner than Eve, as he is aware that what he is doing is wrong.

After eating the fruit, Adam and Eve experience lust for the first time, having sex for personal pleasure rather than reproduction. At first, Adam is convinced that Eve was right in thinking that eating the fruit would be beneficial. However, they soon fall asleep and have terrible nightmares, and after they awake, they experience guilt and shame for the first time. Realising that they have committed a terrible act against God, they engage in mutual recrimination.

Meanwhile, Satan returns triumphantly to Hell, amid the praise of his fellow fallen angels. He tells them about how their scheme worked and Mankind has fallen, giving them complete dominion over Paradise. As he finishes his speech, however, the fallen angels around him become hideous snakes, and soon enough, Satan himself turns into a snake, deprived of limbs and unable to talk. Thus, they share the same punishment, as they shared the same guilt.

Eve appeals to Adam for reconciliation of their actions. Her encouragement enables them to approach God, and sue for grace, bowing on supplicant knee, to receive forgiveness. In a vision shown to him by the Archangel Michael, Adam witnesses everything that will happen to Mankind until the Great Flood. Adam is very upset by this vision of the future, so Michael also tells him about Mankind's potential redemption from original sin through Jesus Christ (whom Michael calls "King Messiah").

Adam and Eve are cast out of Eden, and Michael says that Adam may find "a paradise within thee, happier far". Adam and Eve now have a more distant relationship with God, who is omnipresent but invisible (unlike the tangible Father in the Garden of Eden).

 
Image extracted from page 362 of The Poetical Works of John Milton. Containing Paradise Lost. Paradise Regained. Samson Agonistes, and his Poems on several occasions, by Milton, John, Michael Burghers (1695).

Characters edit

Satan edit

 
Satan Arousing the Rebel Angels, William Blake (1808).

Satan, formerly called Lucifer, is the first major character introduced in the poem. He is a tragic figure who famously declares: "Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven" (1.263). Following his vain rebellion against God he is cast out from Heaven and condemned to Hell. The rebellion stems from Satan's pride and envy (5.660ff.).

Opinions on the character are often sharply divided. Milton presents Satan as the origin of all evil, but some readers have struggled with accepting this interpretation. Romanticist critics in particular, among them William Blake, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and William Hazlitt, are known for interpreting Satan as a hero of Paradise Lost. This has led other critics, such as C. S. Lewis and Charles Williams, both of whom were devout Christians, to argue against reading Satan as a sympathetic, heroic figure.[11][12] Despite Blake thinking that Milton intended for Satan to have a heroic role in the poem, Blake himself described Satan as the "state of error", and as beyond salvation.[13]

John Carey argues that this conflict cannot be solved, because the character of Satan exists in more modes and greater depth than the other characters of Paradise Lost: in this way, Milton has created an ambivalent character, and any "pro-Satan" or "anti-Satan" argument is by its nature discarding half the evidence. Satan's ambivalence, Carey says, is "a precondition of the poem's success – a major factor in the attention it has aroused".[14]

However, in Lewis's book "A Preface to Paradise Lost", he notes that it is important to remember what society was like when Milton wrote the poem. In particular, during that time period, there were certain "stock responses" to elements that Milton would have expected every reader to have. As examples, Lewis lists "love is sweet, death bitter, virtue lovely, and children or gardens delightful". Milton would have expected readers to not view Satan as a hero at all. Lewis says readers far in the future romanticizing Milton's intentions is not accurate because:

“The first qualification for judging any piece of workmanship from a corkscrew to a cathedral is to know what it is—what it was intended to do and how it is meant to be used. After that has been discovered, the temperance reformer may decide that the corkscrew was made for a bad purpose, and the communist may think the same about the cathedral. But such questions come later. The first thing is to understand the object before you: as long as you think the corkscrew was meant for opening tins or the cathedral for entertaining tourists you can say nothing to the purpose about them.” Lewis goes on to note that regarding Paradise Lost, the first thing we need know is “what Milton meant it to be,” a need which he argues is “specially urgent in the present age because the kind of poem Milton meant to write is unfamiliar to many readers.”[15]

Later in the book Lewis details the character of Satan in Paradise Lost, and why he was not someone Milton would have considered a hero or someone to take pleasure in.

Adam edit

Adam is the first human created by God. Adam requests a companion from God:

Of fellowship I speak
Such as I seek, fit to participate
All rational delight, wherein the brute
Cannot be human consort. (8.389–392)

God approves his request then creates Eve. God appoints Adam and Eve to rule over all the creatures of the world and to reside in the Garden of Eden.

Adam is more gregarious than Eve and yearns for her company. He is completely infatuated with her. Raphael advises him to "take heed lest Passion sway / Thy Judgment" (5.635–636). But Adam's great love for Eve contributes to his disobedience to God.

Unlike the biblical Adam, before Milton's Adam leaves Paradise he is given a glimpse of the future of mankind by the Archangel Michael, which includes stories from the Old and New Testaments.

Eve edit

 
William Blake, The Temptation and Fall of Eve, 1808 (illustration of Milton's Paradise Lost).

Eve is the second human created by God. God takes one of Adam's ribs and shapes it into Eve. Whether Eve is actually inferior to Adam is a vexed point. She is often unwilling to be submissive. Eve may be the more intelligent of the two. When she first met Adam she turned away, more interested in herself. She had been looking at her reflection in a lake before being led invisibly to Adam. Recounting this to Adam she confesses that she found him less enticing than her reflection (4.477–480).

Nonetheless, Adam later explains this to Raphael as Eve's

Innocence and Virgin Modestie,
Her vertue and the conscience of her worth,
That would be woo'd, and not unsought be won. (8.501–503)

But Adam's judgment is not always sound. And Eve is beautiful.

Though Eve does love Adam she may feel suffocated by his constant presence. In Book 9 she convinces Adam to separate for a time to work in different parts of the Garden. In her solitude she is deceived by Satan. Satan in the serpent leads Eve to the forbidden tree then persuades her that he has eaten of its fruit and gained knowledge and that she should do the same. She is not easily persuaded to eat, but is hungry in body and in mind.

The Son of God edit

 
The Judgment of Adam and Eve: "So Judged He Man", William Blake (1808)

The Son of God is the spirit who will become incarnate as Jesus Christ, though he is never named explicitly because he has not yet entered human form. Milton believed in a subordinationist doctrine of Christology that regarded the Son as secondary to the Father and as God's "great Vice-regent" (5.609).

Milton's God in Paradise Lost refers to the Son as "My word, my wisdom, and effectual might" (3.170). The poem is not explicitly anti-trinitarian, but it is consistent with Milton's convictions. The Son is the ultimate hero of the epic and is infinitely powerful—he single-handedly defeats Satan and his followers and drives them into Hell. After their fall, the Son of God tells Adam and Eve about God's judgment. Before their fall the Father foretells their "Treason" (3.207) and that Man

with his whole posteritie must dye,
Dye hee or Justice must; unless for him
Som other able, and as willing, pay
The rigid satisfaction, death for death. (3.210–212)

The Father then asks whether there "Dwels in all Heaven charitie so deare?" (3.216) and the Son volunteers himself.

In the final book a vision of Salvation through the Son is revealed to Adam by Michael. The name Jesus of Nazareth, and the details of Jesus' story are not depicted in the poem,[16] though they are alluded to. Michael explains that "Joshua, whom the Gentiles Jesus call", prefigures the Son of God, "his name and office bearing" to "quell / The adversarie Serpent, and bring back [...] long wander[e]d man / Safe to eternal Paradise of rest".[17]

God the Father edit

God the Father is the creator of Heaven, Hell, the world, of everyone and everything there is, through the agency of His Son. Milton presents God as all-powerful and all-knowing, as an infinitely great being who cannot be overthrown by even the great army of angels Satan incites against him. Milton portrays God as often conversing about his plans and his motives for his actions with the Son of God. The poem shows God creating the world in the way Milton believed it was done, that is, God created Heaven, Earth, Hell, and all the creatures that inhabit these separate planes from part of Himself, not out of nothing.[18] Thus, according to Milton, the ultimate authority of God over all things that happen derives from his being the "author" of all creation. Satan tries to justify his rebellion by denying this aspect of God and claiming self-creation, but he admits to himself the truth otherwise, and that God "deserved no such return / From me, whom He created what I was".[19][20]

Raphael edit

 
The Archangel Raphael with Adam and Eve (Illustration to Milton's "Paradise Lost"), William Blake (1808).

Raphael is an archangel who is sent by God to Eden in order to strengthen Adam and Eve against Satan. He tells a heroic tale about the War in Heaven that takes up most of Book 6 of Paradise Lost. Ultimately, the story told by Raphael, in which Satan is portrayed as bold and decisive, does not prepare Adam and Eve to counter Satan's subtle temptations – and may even have caused the Fall in the first place.[21]

Michael edit

Michael is an archangel who is preeminent in military prowess. He leads in battle and uses a sword which was "giv'n him temperd so, that neither keen / Nor solid might resist that edge" (6.322–323).

God sends Michael to Eden, charging him:

from the Paradise of God
Without remorse drive out the sinful Pair
From hallowd ground th' unholie, and denounce
To them and to thir Progenie from thence
Perpetual banishment. [...]
If patiently thy bidding they obey,
Dismiss them not disconsolate; reveale
To Adam what shall come in future dayes,
As I shall thee enlighten, intermix
My Cov'nant in the womans seed renewd;
So send them forth, though sorrowing, yet in peace. (11.103–117)

He is also charged with establishing a guard for Paradise.

When Adam sees him coming he describes him to Eve as

not terrible,
That I should fear, nor sociably mild,
As Raphael, that I should much confide,
But solemn and sublime, whom not to offend,
With reverence I must meet, and thou retire. (11.233–237)

Themes edit

Marriage edit

 
Satan Watching the Caresses of Adam and Eve, William Blake (1808).

Milton first presented Adam and Eve in Book IV with impartiality. The relationship between Adam and Eve is one of "mutual dependence, not a relation of domination or hierarchy". While the author placed Adam above Eve in his intellectual knowledge and, in turn, his relation to God, he granted Eve the benefit of knowledge through experience. Hermine Van Nuis clarifies, that although there was stringency specified for the roles of male and female, Adam and Eve unreservedly accept their designated roles.[22] Rather than viewing these roles as forced upon them, each uses their assignment as an asset in their relationship with each other. These distinctions can be interpreted as Milton's view on the importance of mutuality between husband and wife.

When examining the relationship between Adam and Eve, some critics apply either an Adam-centered or Eve-centered view of hierarchy and importance to God. David Mikics argues, by contrast, these positions "overstate the independence of the characters' stances, and therefore miss the way in which Adam and Eve are entwined with each other".[23] Milton's narrative depicts a relationship where the husband and wife (here, Adam and Eve) depend on each other and, through each other's differences, thrive.[23] Still, there are several instances where Adam communicates directly with God while Eve must go through Adam to God; thus, some have described Adam as her guide.[24][page needed]

 
The Return of Milton's Wife, Henry Fuseli (1798–99)

Although Milton does not directly mention divorce, critics posit theories on Milton's view of divorce based upon their inferences from the poem and from his tracts on divorce written earlier in his life. Other works by Milton suggest he viewed marriage as an entity separate from the church. Discussing Paradise Lost, Biberman entertains the idea that "marriage is a contract made by both the man and the woman".[25] These ideas imply Milton may have favored that both man and woman have equal access to marriage and to divorce.

Idolatry edit

Milton's 17th-century contemporaries by and large criticised his ideas and considered him a radical, mostly because of his republican political views and heterodox theological opinions. One of Milton's most controversial arguments centred on his concept of what is idolatrous, a subject which is deeply embedded in Paradise Lost.

Milton's first criticism of idolatry focused on the constructing of temples and other buildings to serve as places of worship. In Book XI of Paradise Lost, Adam tries to atone for his sins by offering to build altars to worship God. In response, the angel Michael explains that Adam does not need to build physical objects to experience the presence of God.[26] Joseph Lyle points to this example, explaining: "When Milton objects to architecture, it is not a quality inherent in buildings themselves he finds offensive, but rather their tendency to act as convenient loci to which idolatry, over time, will inevitably adhere."[27] Even if the idea is pure in nature, Milton thought it would unavoidably lead to idolatry simply because of the nature of humans. That is, instead of directing their thoughts towards God, humans will turn to erected objects and falsely invest their faith there. While Adam attempts to build an altar to God, critics note Eve is similarly guilty of idolatry, but in a different manner. Harding believes Eve's narcissism and obsession with herself constitutes idolatry.[28] Specifically, Harding claims that "under the serpent's influence, Eve's idolatry and self-deification foreshadow the errors into which her 'Sons' will stray".[28] Much like Adam, Eve falsely places her faith in herself, the Tree of Knowledge, and to some extent the Serpent, all of which do not compare to the ideal nature of God.

Milton made his views on idolatry more explicit with the creation of Pandæmonium and his allusion to Solomon's temple. In the beginning of Paradise Lost and throughout the poem, there are several references to the rise and eventual fall of Solomon's temple. Critics elucidate that "Solomon's temple provides an explicit demonstration of how an artefact moves from its genesis in devotional practice to an idolatrous end."[29] This example, out of the many presented, distinctly conveys Milton's views on the dangers of idolatry. Even if one builds a structure in the name of God, the best of intentions can become immoral in idolatry. The majority of these similarities revolve around a structural likeness, but as Lyle explains, they play a greater role. By linking Saint Peter's Basilica and the Pantheon to Pandemonium—an ideally false structure—the two famous buildings take on a false meaning.[30] This comparison best represents Milton's Protestant views, as it rejects both the purely Catholic perspective and the Pagan perspective.

In addition to rejecting Catholicism, Milton revolted against the idea of a monarch ruling by divine right. He saw the practice as idolatrous. Barbara Lewalski concludes that the theme of idolatry in Paradise Lost "is an exaggerated version of the idolatry Milton had long associated with the Stuart ideology of divine kingship".[31] In the opinion of Milton, any object, human or non-human, that receives special attention befitting of God, is considered idolatrous.

Criticism of monarchy edit

Although Satan's army inevitably loses the war against God, Satan achieves a position of power and begins his reign in Hell with his band of loyal followers, composed of fallen angels, which is described to be a "third of heaven". Similar to Milton's republican sentiments of overthrowing the King of England for both better representation and parliamentary power, Satan argues that his shared rebellion with the fallen angels is an effort to "explain the hypocrisy of God",[citation needed] and in doing so, they will be treated with the respect and acknowledgement that they deserve. As Wayne Rebhorn argues, "Satan insists that he and his fellow revolutionaries held their places by right and even leading him to claim that they were self-created and self-sustained" and thus Satan's position in the rebellion is much like that of his own real world creator.[32]

Milton scholar John Leonard interpreted the "impious war" between Heaven and Hell as civil war:[33][page needed]

Paradise Lost is, among other things, a poem about civil war. Satan raises "impious war in Heav'n" (i 43) by leading a third of the angels in revolt against God. The term "impious war" implies that civil war is impious. But Milton applauded the English people for having the courage to depose and execute King Charles I. In his poem, however, he takes the side of "Heav'n's awful Monarch" (iv 960). Critics have long wrestled with the question of why an antimonarchist and defender of regicide should have chosen a subject that obliged him to defend monarchical authority.

The editors at the Poetry Foundation argue that Milton's criticism of the English monarchy was being directed specifically at the Stuart monarchy and not at the monarchy system in general.[3]

In a similar vein, C. S. Lewis argued that there was no contradiction in Milton's position in the poem since "Milton believed that God was his 'natural superior' and that Charles Stuart was not."[33][page needed]

Morality edit

The critic William Empson claimed the poem was morally ambiguous, with Milton's complex characterization of Satan playing a large part in Empson's claim of moral ambiguity.[33][page needed] For context, the second volume of Empson's authorized biography was titled: William Empson: Against the Christians. In it his authorized biographer describes "Empson’s visceral loathing of Christianity."[34] He spent a large amount of his career attacking Christianity, demonizing it as "wickedness" and claiming that Milton's God was " sickeningly bad."[35] For example, Empson portrays Milton's God as akin to a "Stalinist" tyrant "who enslaves His human creations to serve His own narcissism."

From there, Empson gives fake praise that is really an attack, saying that "Milton deserves credit for making God wicked, since the God of Christianity is 'a wicked God'." John Leonard states that "Empson never denies that Satan's plan is wicked. What he does deny is that God is innocent of its wickedness: 'Milton steadily drives home that the inmost counsel of God was the Fortunate Fall of man; however wicked Satan's plan may be, it is God's plan too [since God in Paradise Lost is depicted as being both omniscient and omnipotent].'"[33][page needed] Leonard notes that this interpretation was challenged by Dennis Danielson in his book Milton's Good God (1982).[33][page needed]

Alexandra Kapelos-Peters explains that: "as Danielson logically asserts, foreknowledge is not commensurate with culpability. Although God knew that Adam and Eve would eat the forbidden fruit of knowledge, He neither commanded them to do so, nor influenced their decision." Moreover, God gives humans free will to choose to do good or evil, while a tyrant would do the very opposite and deny free will by controlling his subjects' actions like a puppet-master. She says Danielson and Milton "demonstrate one crucial point: the presence of sin in the world is attributable to human agency and free will. Danielson argues that free will is crucial, because without it humanity would have only been serving necessity, and not participating in a free love act with the divine."[36] She notes that in Paradise Lost, God says: "They trespass, Authors to themselves in all, Both what they judge and what they choose; for so I formd them free, and free they must remain."

Kapelos-Peters adds: "Milton demonstrates that far from being a tyrannical lord, God and the Son function as a collaborative team that desire nothing but the return of man to his pre-fallen state. Furthermore, God is not even able to dominate in this aspect because human agency and free-will are not abandoned. Not only will the Son sacrifice himself pre-emptively in Book 3 for the not-yet-occurred Fall of Man, but Man himself will have a role in his own salvation. To successfully navigate atonement, humanity will have to admit and repent of their former disobedience."

C. S. Lewis also rebutted the approach of people like Empson super-imposing their own interpretations with an agenda onto the poem long after it was written. Lewis wrote: "The first qualification for judging any piece of workmanship from a corkscrew to a cathedral is to know what it is - what it was intended to do and how it is meant to be used."[37] Lewis said the poem was a genuine Christian morality tale.[33][page needed] In Lewis's book "A Preface to Paradise Lost", he discusses the theological similarities between Paradise Lost and St. Augustine, and says that "The Fall is simply and solely Disobedience - doing what you have been told not to do: and it results from Pride - from being too big for your boots, forgetting your place, thinking that you are God"[38]

A summary of the book reads: "Considering this story within the context of the Western literary tradition, Lewis offers invaluable insights into Paradise Lost and the nature of literature itself, unveiling the poem's beauty and its wisdom. With a clarity of thought and a style that are the trademarks of Lewis’s writing, he provides answers with a lucidity and lightness that deepens our understanding of Milton’s immortal work. Also inspiring new readers to revisit Paradise Lost, Lewis reminds us of why elements including ritual, splendour and joy deserve to exist and hold a sacred place in human life."[39]

Style edit

Milton used a number of acrostics in the poem. In Book 9, a verse describing the serpent which tempted Eve to eat the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden spells out "SATAN" (9.510), while elsewhere in the same book, Milton spells out "FFAALL" and "FALL" (9.333). Respectively, these probably represent the double fall of humanity embodied in Adam and Eve, as well as Satan's fall from Heaven.[40]

Blank verse edit

Blank verse was not much used in the non-dramatic poetry of the 17th century until Paradise Lost, in which Milton used it with much license and tremendous skill. Milton used the flexibility of blank verse, and its capacity to support syntactic complexity, to the utmost. Milton also wrote Paradise Regained and parts of Samson Agonistes in blank verse.

Although Milton was not the first to use blank verse, his use of it was very influential and he became known for the style. When Miltonic verse became popular, Samuel Johnson mocked Milton for inspiring bad blank verse, but he recognized that Milton's verse style was very influential.[41] Poets such as Alexander Pope, whose final, incomplete work was intended to be written in the form,[42] and John Keats, who complained that he relied too heavily on Milton,[43] adopted and picked up various aspects of his poetry. In particular, Miltonic blank verse became the standard for those attempting to write English epics for centuries following the publication of Paradise Lost and his later poetry.[44] The poet Robert Bridges analyzed his versification in the monograph Milton's Prosody.

Interpretation and critique edit

 
Plate prefacing Book 3, Creation of Man, engraving by Michael Burghers based on John Baptist Medina, from the 1688 edition.

Eighteenth-century critics edit

The writer and critic Samuel Johnson wrote that Paradise Lost shows off Milton's "peculiar power to astonish" and that Milton "seems to have been well acquainted with his own genius, and to know what it was that Nature had bestowed upon him more bountifully than upon others: the power of displaying the vast, illuminating the splendid, enforcing the awful, darkening the gloomy, and aggravating the dreadful".[45]

William Blake famously wrote in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell: "The reason Milton wrote in fetters when he wrote of Angels & God, and at liberty when of Devils & Hell, is because he was a true Poet and of the Devil's party without knowing it."[46] This quotation succinctly represents the way in which some 18th- and 19th-century English Romantic poets viewed Milton.

Christian epic edit

Tobias Gregory wrote that Milton was "the most theologically learned among early modern epic poets. He was, moreover, a theologian of great independence of mind, and one who developed his talents within a society where the problem of divine justice was debated with particular intensity."[47] Gregory says that Milton is able to establish divine action and his divine characters in a superior way to other Renaissance epic poets, including Ludovico Ariosto or Torquato Tasso.[48]

In Paradise Lost Milton also ignores the traditional epic format of a plot based on a mortal conflict between opposing armies with deities watching over and occasionally interfering with the action. Instead, both divinity and humanity are involved in a conflict that, while momentarily ending in tragedy, offers a future salvation.[48] In both Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained, Milton incorporates aspects of Lucan's epic model, the epic from the view of the defeated. Although he does not accept the model completely within Paradise Regained, he incorporates the "anti-Virgilian, anti-imperial epic tradition of Lucan".[49] Milton goes further than Lucan in this belief and "Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained carry further, too, the movement toward and valorization of romance that Lucan's tradition had begun, to the point where Milton's poems effectively create their own new genre".[50]

Iconography edit

The first illustrations to accompany the text of Paradise Lost were added to the fourth edition of 1688, with one engraving prefacing each book, of which up to eight of the twelve were by Sir John Baptist Medina, one by Bernard Lens II, and perhaps up to four (including Books I and XII, perhaps the most memorable) by another hand.[51] The engraver was Michael Burghers (given as 'Burgesse' in some sources[52]). By 1730, the same images had been re-engraved on a smaller scale by Paul Fourdrinier.

Some of the most notable illustrators of Paradise Lost included William Blake, Gustave Doré, and Henry Fuseli. However, the epic's illustrators also include John Martin, Edward Francis Burney, Richard Westall, Francis Hayman, and many others.

Outside of book illustrations, the epic has also inspired other visual works by well-known painters like Salvador Dalí who executed a set of ten colour engravings in 1974.[53] Milton's achievement in writing Paradise Lost while blind (he dictated to helpers) inspired loosely biographical paintings by both Fuseli[54] and Eugène Delacroix.[55]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Milton 1674.
  2. ^ . Dartmouth College. Archived from the original on 24 May 2019. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  3. ^ a b "John Milton". Poetry Foundation. 19 April 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Leonard 2000, p. xii.
  5. ^ Leonard 2000, p. xiii.
  6. ^ Broadbent 1972, p. 54.
  7. ^ Abrahm, M. H., Stephen Greenblatt, eds. The Norton Anthology of English Literature. New York: Norton, 2000.
  8. ^ Matthew, H. C. G.; Harrison, B., eds. (23 September 2004). "Matthew Simmons (et al)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/69230. Retrieved 27 July 2023. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  9. ^ Forsythe, Neil (2002). The Satanic Epic. Princeton University.
  10. ^ Teskey, Gordon (2005). "Introduction". Paradise Lost: A Norton Critical Edition. New York: Norton. pp. xxvii-xxviii. ISBN 978-0393924282.
  11. ^ Carey, John (22 July 1999), Danielson, Dennis (ed.), "Milton's Satan", The Cambridge Companion to Milton (2 ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 160–174, doi:10.1017/ccol052165226x.011, ISBN 978-0-521-65226-1, retrieved 2 May 2022
  12. ^ "A Preface to Paradise Lost". www.somesmart.com. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
  13. ^ Damon, S. Foster; Eaves, Morris (1988). A Blake dictionary: the ideas and symbols of William Blake (Rev. ed. with a new foreword and annotated bibliography ed.). Hanover (N. H.) London: University press of New England for Brown university press. ISBN 978-0-87451-436-0.
  14. ^ Carey, John (22 July 1999), Danielson, Dennis (ed.), "Milton's Satan", The Cambridge Companion to Milton (2 ed.), Cambridge University Press, p. 161, doi:10.1017/ccol052165226x.011, ISBN 978-0-521-65226-1, retrieved 2 May 2022
  15. ^ Brown, Devin (8 September 2010). "Corkscrews, Cathedrals, and the Chronicles of Narnia". Official Site | CSLewis.com. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
  16. ^ Marshall 1961, p. 17.
  17. ^ Milton 1674, 12.310–314.
  18. ^ Lehnhof 2004, p. 15.
  19. ^ Milton 1674, 4.42–43.
  20. ^ Lehnhof 2004, p. 24.
  21. ^ Johnson, Kimberly (2012). "Raphael's "Potent Tongue": Power and Spectacle in "Paradise Lost"". Milton Quarterly. 46 (4): 205–218. doi:10.1111/milt.12010. ISSN 0026-4326. JSTOR 24462156.
  22. ^ Van Nuis 2000, p. 50.
  23. ^ a b Mikics 2004, p. 22.
  24. ^ Mikics 2004.
  25. ^ Biberman 1999, p. 137.
  26. ^ Milton 1674, Book 11.
  27. ^ Lyle 2000, p. 139.
  28. ^ a b Harding 2007, p. 163.
  29. ^ Lyle 2000, p. 140.
  30. ^ Lyle 2000, p. 147.
  31. ^ Lewalski 2003, p. 223.
  32. ^ Rebhorn, Wayne A. "The Humanist Tradition and Milton's Satan: The Conservative as Revolutionary". SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900, vol. 13, no. 1, The English Renaissance (Winter 1973), pp. 81–93.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Leonard, John. "Introduction". Paradise Lost. New York: Penguin, 2000.
  34. ^ peterwebster (20 November 2007). "William Empson against the Christians". Webstory. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
  35. ^ Haffenden, John (2 November 2006). William Empson: Against the Christians. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-383-04203-0.
  36. ^ Kapelos-Peters, Alexandra (27 November 2007). "» Milton's just, merciful and redemptive God". www.alexandrakp.com. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
  37. ^ David (18 July 2023). "S6E34 – AH – Jack's Bookshelf: John Milton, After Hours with Graeme Donaldson". Pints With Jack. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
  38. ^ "A Preface to Paradise Lost". www.somesmart.com. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
  39. ^ "A Preface to Paradise Lost by C. S. Lewis". www.shakespeareandcompany.com. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
  40. ^ Phaal, Miranda (2019). "The Treble Fall: An Interlocking Acrostic in Paradise Lost". Milton Quarterly. 53 (1): 67–68. doi:10.1111/milt.12285. ISSN 1094-348X. S2CID 202372407.
  41. ^ Greene 1989, p. 27.
  42. ^ Brisman 1973, pp. 7–8.
  43. ^ Keats 1899, p. 408.
  44. ^ Bate 1962, pp. 66–67.
  45. ^ Johnson, Samuel. Lives of the English Poets. New York: Octagon, 1967.
  46. ^ Blake, William. The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. 1793.
  47. ^ Gregory 2006, p. 178.
  48. ^ a b 2006, pp. 178–179.
  49. ^ Quint 1993, pp. 325–326.
  50. ^ Quint 1993, p. 340.
  51. ^ Illustrating Paradise Lost ( 1 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine) from Christ's College, Cambridge, has all twelve on line. See Medina's article for more on the authorship, and all the illustrations, which are also in Commons.
  52. ^ William Bridges Hunter (1978). A Milton encyclopedia. Bucknell University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8387-1837-7.
  53. ^ Lockport Street Gallery. Retrieved on 2013-12-13.
  54. ^ Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved on 2013-12-13.
  55. ^ WikiPaintings. Retrieved on 2013-12-13.

Bibliography edit

  • Biberman, M (January 1999), "Milton, Marriage, and a Woman's Right to Divorce", SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900, 39 (1): 131–153, doi:10.2307/1556309, JSTOR 1556309
  • Broadbent, John (1972), Paradise Lost: Introduction, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521096393
  • Harding, P (January 2007), "Milton's Serpent and the Birth of Pagan Error", SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900, 47 (1): 161–177, doi:10.1353/sel.2007.0003, S2CID 161758649
  • Lehnhof, K. (2004), "Paradise Lost and the Concept of Creation", South Central Review, 21 (2): 15–41, doi:10.1353/scr.2004.0021, S2CID 13244028
  • Leonard, John (2000), "Introduction", in Milton, John (ed.), Paradise Lost, New York: Penguin, ISBN 9780140424393
  • Lewalski, B. (January 2003), "Milton and Idolatry", SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900, 43 (1): 213–232, doi:10.1353/sel.2003.0008, S2CID 170082234
  • Lyle, J (January 2000), "Architecture and Idolatry in Paradise Lost", SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900, 40 (1): 139–155, doi:10.2307/1556158, JSTOR 1556158
  • Marshall, W. H. (January 1961), "Paradise Lost: Felix Culpa and the Problem of Structure", Modern Language Notes, 76 (1): 15–20, doi:10.2307/3040476, JSTOR 3040476
  • Mikics, D (2004), "Miltonic Marriage and the Challenge to History in Paradise Lost", Texas Studies in Literature and Language, 46 (1): 20–48, doi:10.1353/tsl.2004.0005, S2CID 161371845
  • Milton, J (1674), Paradise Lost  (2nd ed.), London: S. Simmons
  • Van Nuis, H (May 2000), "Animated Eve Confronting Her Animus: A Jungian Approach to the Division of Labor Debate in Paradise Lost", Milton Quarterly, 34 (2): 48–56, doi:10.1111/j.1094-348X.2000.tb00619.x

Further reading edit

  • John Milton: A Short Introduction (2002 ed., paperback by Roy C. Flannagan, Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, ISBN 978-0-631-22620-8; 2008 ed., ebook by Roy Flannagan, Massachusetts: Wiley-Blackwell, ISBN 978-0-470-69287-5)
  • Al-Akhras, Sharihan; Green, Mandy (2017). Satanic whispers: Milton's Iblis and the "Great Sultan". The Seventeenth Century, 32:1, pp. 31–50. doi:10.1080/0268117X.2016.1252279.
  • Black, J., ed. (March 2007), "Paradise Lost", The Broadview Anthology of British Literature, vol. A (Concise ed.), Peterborough, Ontario: Broadview Press, pp. 998–1061, ISBN 978-1-55111-868-0, OCLC 75811389
  • Bradford, R. (July 1992), Paradise Lost (1st ed.), Philadelphia: Open University Press, ISBN 978-0-335-09982-5, OCLC 25050319
  • Forsyth, N. (2003), The Satanic Epic, Princeton: Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-11339-5
  • Frye, N. (1965), The Return of Eden: Five Essays on Milton's Epics, Toronto: University of Toronto Press
  • Kerrigan, W., ed. (2007), The Complete Poetry and Essential Prose of John Milton, New York: Random House, ISBN 978-0-679-64253-4, OCLC 81940956
  • Miller, T. C., ed. (1997), The Critical Response to John Milton's "Paradise Lost", Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 978-0-313-28926-2, OCLC 35762631
  • Patrides, C. A. The Age of Milton: Backgrounds to Seventeenth-century Literature (Manchester University, 1980), ISBN 0-7190-0770-4.
  • Walker, Julia M. (1998), Medusa's Mirrors: Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and the Metamorphosis of the Female Self, University of Delaware Press, ISBN 978-0-87413-625-8

External links edit

  • Gustave Doré Paradise Lost Illustrations from the university at Buffalo Libraries
  • (archived 6 February 2011)
  •   Paradise Lost public domain audiobook at LibriVox

Online text edit

  • Paradise Lost at Standard Ebooks
  • Project Gutenberg text version 1
  • Project Gutenberg text version 2

Other information edit

  • darkness visible – comprehensive site for students and others new to Milton: contexts, plot and character summaries, reading suggestions, critical history, gallery of illustrations of Paradise Lost, and much more. By students at Milton's Cambridge college, Christ's College.
  •  – includes background, biography, criticism.

paradise, lost, other, uses, disambiguation, epic, poem, blank, verse, 17th, century, english, poet, john, milton, 1608, 1674, first, version, published, 1667, consists, books, with, over, thousand, lines, verse, second, edition, followed, 1674, arranged, into. For other uses see Paradise Lost disambiguation Paradise Lost is an epic poem in blank verse by the 17th century English poet John Milton 1608 1674 The first version published in 1667 consists of ten books with over ten thousand lines of verse A second edition followed in 1674 arranged into twelve books in the manner of Virgil s Aeneid with minor revisions throughout 1 2 It is considered to be Milton s masterpiece and it helped solidify his reputation as one of the greatest English poets of all time 3 The poem concerns the biblical story of the fall of man the temptation of Adam and Eve by the fallen angel Satan and their expulsion from the Garden of Eden Paradise LostTitle page of the first edition 1667 AuthorJohn MiltonCover artistJ B de MedinaHenry AldrichCountryEnglandLanguageEnglishGenreEpic poetryChristian mythologyPublisherSamuel Simmons original Publication date1667Media typePrintFollowed byParadise Regained TextParadise Lost at Wikisource source source LibriVox recording by Owen Book One Part 1 Contents 1 Composition 1 1 Publication 2 Synopsis 3 Characters 3 1 Satan 3 2 Adam 3 3 Eve 3 4 The Son of God 3 5 God the Father 3 6 Raphael 3 7 Michael 4 Themes 4 1 Marriage 4 2 Idolatry 4 3 Criticism of monarchy 4 4 Morality 5 Style 5 1 Blank verse 6 Interpretation and critique 6 1 Eighteenth century critics 6 2 Christian epic 7 Iconography 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 Online text 11 2 Other informationComposition edit nbsp Milton Dictating to His Daughter Henry Fuseli 1794 In his introduction to the Penguin published edition of Paradise Lost the Milton scholar John Leonard notes John Milton was nearly sixty when he published Paradise Lost in 1667 The biographer John Aubrey 1626 1697 tells us that the poem was begun in about 1658 and finished in about 1663 However parts were almost certainly written earlier and its roots lie in Milton s earliest youth 4 Leonard speculates that the English Civil War interrupted Milton s earliest attempts to start his epic poem that would encompass all space and time 4 Leonard also notes that Milton did not at first plan to write a biblical epic 4 Since epics were typically written about heroic kings and queens and with pagan gods Milton originally envisioned his epic to be based on a legendary Saxon or British king like the legend of King Arthur 5 6 Having gone blind in 1652 Milton wrote Paradise Lost entirely through dictation with the help of amanuenses and friends He also wrote the epic poem while often ill suffering from gout and suffering emotionally after the early death of his second wife Katherine Woodcock in 1658 and their infant daughter 7 Publication edit Milton s previous work had been printed by Matthew Simmons who was favoured by radical writers However he died in 1654 and the business was then run by Mary Simmons Milton had not published work with the Simmons printing business for twenty years Mary was increasingly relying on her son Samuel to help her manage the business and the first book that Samuel Simmons registered for publication in his name was Paradise Lost in 1667 8 In the 1667 version of Paradise Lost the poem was divided into ten books However in the 1674 edition the text was reorganized into twelve books 9 In later printing Arguments brief summaries were inserted at the beginning of each book 10 Synopsis edit nbsp Gustave Dore The Heavenly Hosts c 1866 illustration to Paradise Lost The poem follows the epic tradition of starting in medias res lit in the midst of things the background story being recounted later Milton s story has two narrative arcs one about Satan Lucifer and the other Adam and Eve It begins after Satan and the other fallen angels have been defeated and banished to Hell or as it is also called in the poem Tartarus In Pandaemonium the capital city of Hell Satan employs his rhetorical skill to organise his followers he is aided by Mammon and Beelzebub Belial Chemosh and Moloch are also present At the end of the debate Satan volunteers to corrupt the newly created Earth and God s new and most favoured creation Mankind He braves the dangers of the Abyss alone in a manner reminiscent of Odysseus or Aeneas After an arduous traversal of the Chaos outside Hell he enters God s new material World and later the Garden of Eden At several points in the poem an Angelic War over Heaven is recounted from different perspectives Satan s rebellion follows the epic convention of large scale warfare The battles between the faithful angels and Satan s forces take place over three days At the final battle the Son of God single handedly defeats the entire legion of angelic rebels and banishes them from Heaven Following this purge God creates the World culminating in his creation of Adam and Eve While God gave Adam and Eve total freedom and power to rule over all creation he gave them one explicit command not to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil on penalty of death The story of Adam and Eve s temptation and fall is a fundamentally different new kind of epic further explanation needed a domestic one Adam and Eve are presented as having a romantic and sexual relationship while still being without sin They have passions and distinct personalities Satan disguised in the form of a serpent successfully tempts Eve to eat from the Tree by preying on her vanity and tricking her with rhetoric Adam learning that Eve has sinned knowingly commits the same sin He declares to Eve that since she was made from his flesh they are bound to one another if she dies he must also die In this manner Milton portrays Adam as a heroic figure but also as a greater sinner than Eve as he is aware that what he is doing is wrong After eating the fruit Adam and Eve experience lust for the first time having sex for personal pleasure rather than reproduction At first Adam is convinced that Eve was right in thinking that eating the fruit would be beneficial However they soon fall asleep and have terrible nightmares and after they awake they experience guilt and shame for the first time Realising that they have committed a terrible act against God they engage in mutual recrimination Meanwhile Satan returns triumphantly to Hell amid the praise of his fellow fallen angels He tells them about how their scheme worked and Mankind has fallen giving them complete dominion over Paradise As he finishes his speech however the fallen angels around him become hideous snakes and soon enough Satan himself turns into a snake deprived of limbs and unable to talk Thus they share the same punishment as they shared the same guilt Eve appeals to Adam for reconciliation of their actions Her encouragement enables them to approach God and sue for grace bowing on supplicant knee to receive forgiveness In a vision shown to him by the Archangel Michael Adam witnesses everything that will happen to Mankind until the Great Flood Adam is very upset by this vision of the future so Michael also tells him about Mankind s potential redemption from original sin through Jesus Christ whom Michael calls King Messiah Adam and Eve are cast out of Eden and Michael says that Adam may find a paradise within thee happier far Adam and Eve now have a more distant relationship with God who is omnipresent but invisible unlike the tangible Father in the Garden of Eden nbsp Image extracted from page 362 of The Poetical Works of John Milton Containing Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Samson Agonistes and his Poems on several occasions by Milton John Michael Burghers 1695 Characters editSatan edit nbsp Satan Arousing the Rebel Angels William Blake 1808 Main article Prince of Darkness Satan Satan formerly called Lucifer is the first major character introduced in the poem He is a tragic figure who famously declares Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven 1 263 Following his vain rebellion against God he is cast out from Heaven and condemned to Hell The rebellion stems from Satan s pride and envy 5 660ff Opinions on the character are often sharply divided Milton presents Satan as the origin of all evil but some readers have struggled with accepting this interpretation Romanticist critics in particular among them William Blake Lord Byron Percy Bysshe Shelley and William Hazlitt are known for interpreting Satan as a hero of Paradise Lost This has led other critics such as C S Lewis and Charles Williams both of whom were devout Christians to argue against reading Satan as a sympathetic heroic figure 11 12 Despite Blake thinking that Milton intended for Satan to have a heroic role in the poem Blake himself described Satan as the state of error and as beyond salvation 13 John Carey argues that this conflict cannot be solved because the character of Satan exists in more modes and greater depth than the other characters of Paradise Lost in this way Milton has created an ambivalent character and any pro Satan or anti Satan argument is by its nature discarding half the evidence Satan s ambivalence Carey says is a precondition of the poem s success a major factor in the attention it has aroused 14 However in Lewis s book A Preface to Paradise Lost he notes that it is important to remember what society was like when Milton wrote the poem In particular during that time period there were certain stock responses to elements that Milton would have expected every reader to have As examples Lewis lists love is sweet death bitter virtue lovely and children or gardens delightful Milton would have expected readers to not view Satan as a hero at all Lewis says readers far in the future romanticizing Milton s intentions is not accurate because The first qualification for judging any piece of workmanship from a corkscrew to a cathedral is to know what it is what it was intended to do and how it is meant to be used After that has been discovered the temperance reformer may decide that the corkscrew was made for a bad purpose and the communist may think the same about the cathedral But such questions come later The first thing is to understand the object before you as long as you think the corkscrew was meant for opening tins or the cathedral for entertaining tourists you can say nothing to the purpose about them Lewis goes on to note that regarding Paradise Lost the first thing we need know is what Milton meant it to be a need which he argues is specially urgent in the present age because the kind of poem Milton meant to write is unfamiliar to many readers 15 Later in the book Lewis details the character of Satan in Paradise Lost and why he was not someone Milton would have considered a hero or someone to take pleasure in Adam edit Adam is the first human created by God Adam requests a companion from God Of fellowship I speakSuch as I seek fit to participateAll rational delight wherein the bruteCannot be human consort 8 389 392 God approves his request then creates Eve God appoints Adam and Eve to rule over all the creatures of the world and to reside in the Garden of Eden Adam is more gregarious than Eve and yearns for her company He is completely infatuated with her Raphael advises him to take heed lest Passion sway Thy Judgment 5 635 636 But Adam s great love for Eve contributes to his disobedience to God Unlike the biblical Adam before Milton s Adam leaves Paradise he is given a glimpse of the future of mankind by the Archangel Michael which includes stories from the Old and New Testaments Eve edit nbsp William Blake The Temptation and Fall of Eve 1808 illustration of Milton s Paradise Lost Eve is the second human created by God God takes one of Adam s ribs and shapes it into Eve Whether Eve is actually inferior to Adam is a vexed point She is often unwilling to be submissive Eve may be the more intelligent of the two When she first met Adam she turned away more interested in herself She had been looking at her reflection in a lake before being led invisibly to Adam Recounting this to Adam she confesses that she found him less enticing than her reflection 4 477 480 Nonetheless Adam later explains this to Raphael as Eve sInnocence and Virgin Modestie Her vertue and the conscience of her worth That would be woo d and not unsought be won 8 501 503 But Adam s judgment is not always sound And Eve is beautiful Though Eve does love Adam she may feel suffocated by his constant presence In Book 9 she convinces Adam to separate for a time to work in different parts of the Garden In her solitude she is deceived by Satan Satan in the serpent leads Eve to the forbidden tree then persuades her that he has eaten of its fruit and gained knowledge and that she should do the same She is not easily persuaded to eat but is hungry in body and in mind The Son of God edit nbsp The Judgment of Adam and Eve So Judged He Man William Blake 1808 The Son of God is the spirit who will become incarnate as Jesus Christ though he is never named explicitly because he has not yet entered human form Milton believed in a subordinationist doctrine of Christology that regarded the Son as secondary to the Father and as God s great Vice regent 5 609 Milton s God in Paradise Lost refers to the Son as My word my wisdom and effectual might 3 170 The poem is not explicitly anti trinitarian but it is consistent with Milton s convictions The Son is the ultimate hero of the epic and is infinitely powerful he single handedly defeats Satan and his followers and drives them into Hell After their fall the Son of God tells Adam and Eve about God s judgment Before their fall the Father foretells their Treason 3 207 and that Man with his whole posteritie must dye Dye hee or Justice must unless for him Som other able and as willing pay The rigid satisfaction death for death 3 210 212 The Father then asks whether there Dwels in all Heaven charitie so deare 3 216 and the Son volunteers himself In the final book a vision of Salvation through the Son is revealed to Adam by Michael The name Jesus of Nazareth and the details of Jesus story are not depicted in the poem 16 though they are alluded to Michael explains that Joshua whom the Gentiles Jesus call prefigures the Son of God his name and office bearing to quell The adversarie Serpent and bring back long wander e d man Safe to eternal Paradise of rest 17 God the Father edit God the Father is the creator of Heaven Hell the world of everyone and everything there is through the agency of His Son Milton presents God as all powerful and all knowing as an infinitely great being who cannot be overthrown by even the great army of angels Satan incites against him Milton portrays God as often conversing about his plans and his motives for his actions with the Son of God The poem shows God creating the world in the way Milton believed it was done that is God created Heaven Earth Hell and all the creatures that inhabit these separate planes from part of Himself not out of nothing 18 Thus according to Milton the ultimate authority of God over all things that happen derives from his being the author of all creation Satan tries to justify his rebellion by denying this aspect of God and claiming self creation but he admits to himself the truth otherwise and that God deserved no such return From me whom He created what I was 19 20 Raphael edit nbsp The Archangel Raphael with Adam and Eve Illustration to Milton s Paradise Lost William Blake 1808 Raphael is an archangel who is sent by God to Eden in order to strengthen Adam and Eve against Satan He tells a heroic tale about the War in Heaven that takes up most of Book 6 of Paradise Lost Ultimately the story told by Raphael in which Satan is portrayed as bold and decisive does not prepare Adam and Eve to counter Satan s subtle temptations and may even have caused the Fall in the first place 21 Michael edit Michael is an archangel who is preeminent in military prowess He leads in battle and uses a sword which was giv n him temperd so that neither keen Nor solid might resist that edge 6 322 323 God sends Michael to Eden charging him from the Paradise of God Without remorse drive out the sinful Pair From hallowd ground th unholie and denounce To them and to thir Progenie from thence Perpetual banishment If patiently thy bidding they obey Dismiss them not disconsolate reveale To Adam what shall come in future dayes As I shall thee enlighten intermix My Cov nant in the womans seed renewd So send them forth though sorrowing yet in peace 11 103 117 He is also charged with establishing a guard for Paradise When Adam sees him coming he describes him to Eve as not terrible That I should fear nor sociably mild As Raphael that I should much confide But solemn and sublime whom not to offend With reverence I must meet and thou retire 11 233 237 Themes editMarriage edit nbsp Satan Watching the Caresses of Adam and Eve William Blake 1808 Milton first presented Adam and Eve in Book IV with impartiality The relationship between Adam and Eve is one of mutual dependence not a relation of domination or hierarchy While the author placed Adam above Eve in his intellectual knowledge and in turn his relation to God he granted Eve the benefit of knowledge through experience Hermine Van Nuis clarifies that although there was stringency specified for the roles of male and female Adam and Eve unreservedly accept their designated roles 22 Rather than viewing these roles as forced upon them each uses their assignment as an asset in their relationship with each other These distinctions can be interpreted as Milton s view on the importance of mutuality between husband and wife When examining the relationship between Adam and Eve some critics apply either an Adam centered or Eve centered view of hierarchy and importance to God David Mikics argues by contrast these positions overstate the independence of the characters stances and therefore miss the way in which Adam and Eve are entwined with each other 23 Milton s narrative depicts a relationship where the husband and wife here Adam and Eve depend on each other and through each other s differences thrive 23 Still there are several instances where Adam communicates directly with God while Eve must go through Adam to God thus some have described Adam as her guide 24 page needed nbsp The Return of Milton s Wife Henry Fuseli 1798 99 Although Milton does not directly mention divorce critics posit theories on Milton s view of divorce based upon their inferences from the poem and from his tracts on divorce written earlier in his life Other works by Milton suggest he viewed marriage as an entity separate from the church Discussing Paradise Lost Biberman entertains the idea that marriage is a contract made by both the man and the woman 25 These ideas imply Milton may have favored that both man and woman have equal access to marriage and to divorce Idolatry edit Milton s 17th century contemporaries by and large criticised his ideas and considered him a radical mostly because of his republican political views and heterodox theological opinions One of Milton s most controversial arguments centred on his concept of what is idolatrous a subject which is deeply embedded in Paradise Lost Milton s first criticism of idolatry focused on the constructing of temples and other buildings to serve as places of worship In Book XI of Paradise Lost Adam tries to atone for his sins by offering to build altars to worship God In response the angel Michael explains that Adam does not need to build physical objects to experience the presence of God 26 Joseph Lyle points to this example explaining When Milton objects to architecture it is not a quality inherent in buildings themselves he finds offensive but rather their tendency to act as convenient loci to which idolatry over time will inevitably adhere 27 Even if the idea is pure in nature Milton thought it would unavoidably lead to idolatry simply because of the nature of humans That is instead of directing their thoughts towards God humans will turn to erected objects and falsely invest their faith there While Adam attempts to build an altar to God critics note Eve is similarly guilty of idolatry but in a different manner Harding believes Eve s narcissism and obsession with herself constitutes idolatry 28 Specifically Harding claims that under the serpent s influence Eve s idolatry and self deification foreshadow the errors into which her Sons will stray 28 Much like Adam Eve falsely places her faith in herself the Tree of Knowledge and to some extent the Serpent all of which do not compare to the ideal nature of God Milton made his views on idolatry more explicit with the creation of Pandaemonium and his allusion to Solomon s temple In the beginning of Paradise Lost and throughout the poem there are several references to the rise and eventual fall of Solomon s temple Critics elucidate that Solomon s temple provides an explicit demonstration of how an artefact moves from its genesis in devotional practice to an idolatrous end 29 This example out of the many presented distinctly conveys Milton s views on the dangers of idolatry Even if one builds a structure in the name of God the best of intentions can become immoral in idolatry The majority of these similarities revolve around a structural likeness but as Lyle explains they play a greater role By linking Saint Peter s Basilica and the Pantheon to Pandemonium an ideally false structure the two famous buildings take on a false meaning 30 This comparison best represents Milton s Protestant views as it rejects both the purely Catholic perspective and the Pagan perspective In addition to rejecting Catholicism Milton revolted against the idea of a monarch ruling by divine right He saw the practice as idolatrous Barbara Lewalski concludes that the theme of idolatry in Paradise Lost is an exaggerated version of the idolatry Milton had long associated with the Stuart ideology of divine kingship 31 In the opinion of Milton any object human or non human that receives special attention befitting of God is considered idolatrous Criticism of monarchy edit Although Satan s army inevitably loses the war against God Satan achieves a position of power and begins his reign in Hell with his band of loyal followers composed of fallen angels which is described to be a third of heaven Similar to Milton s republican sentiments of overthrowing the King of England for both better representation and parliamentary power Satan argues that his shared rebellion with the fallen angels is an effort to explain the hypocrisy of God citation needed and in doing so they will be treated with the respect and acknowledgement that they deserve As Wayne Rebhorn argues Satan insists that he and his fellow revolutionaries held their places by right and even leading him to claim that they were self created and self sustained and thus Satan s position in the rebellion is much like that of his own real world creator 32 Milton scholar John Leonard interpreted the impious war between Heaven and Hell as civil war 33 page needed Paradise Lost is among other things a poem about civil war Satan raises impious war in Heav n i 43 by leading a third of the angels in revolt against God The term impious war implies that civil war is impious But Milton applauded the English people for having the courage to depose and execute King Charles I In his poem however he takes the side of Heav n s awful Monarch iv 960 Critics have long wrestled with the question of why an antimonarchist and defender of regicide should have chosen a subject that obliged him to defend monarchical authority The editors at the Poetry Foundation argue that Milton s criticism of the English monarchy was being directed specifically at the Stuart monarchy and not at the monarchy system in general 3 In a similar vein C S Lewis argued that there was no contradiction in Milton s position in the poem since Milton believed that God was his natural superior and that Charles Stuart was not 33 page needed Morality edit The critic William Empson claimed the poem was morally ambiguous with Milton s complex characterization of Satan playing a large part in Empson s claim of moral ambiguity 33 page needed For context the second volume of Empson s authorized biography was titled William Empson Against the Christians In it his authorized biographer describes Empson s visceral loathing of Christianity 34 He spent a large amount of his career attacking Christianity demonizing it as wickedness and claiming that Milton s God was sickeningly bad 35 For example Empson portrays Milton s God as akin to a Stalinist tyrant who enslaves His human creations to serve His own narcissism From there Empson gives fake praise that is really an attack saying that Milton deserves credit for making God wicked since the God of Christianity is a wicked God John Leonard states that Empson never denies that Satan s plan is wicked What he does deny is that God is innocent of its wickedness Milton steadily drives home that the inmost counsel of God was the Fortunate Fall of man however wicked Satan s plan may be it is God s plan too since God in Paradise Lost is depicted as being both omniscient and omnipotent 33 page needed Leonard notes that this interpretation was challenged by Dennis Danielson in his book Milton s Good God 1982 33 page needed Alexandra Kapelos Peters explains that as Danielson logically asserts foreknowledge is not commensurate with culpability Although God knew that Adam and Eve would eat the forbidden fruit of knowledge He neither commanded them to do so nor influenced their decision Moreover God gives humans free will to choose to do good or evil while a tyrant would do the very opposite and deny free will by controlling his subjects actions like a puppet master She says Danielson and Milton demonstrate one crucial point the presence of sin in the world is attributable to human agency and free will Danielson argues that free will is crucial because without it humanity would have only been serving necessity and not participating in a free love act with the divine 36 She notes that in Paradise Lost God says They trespass Authors to themselves in all Both what they judge and what they choose for so I formd them free and free they must remain Kapelos Peters adds Milton demonstrates that far from being a tyrannical lord God and the Son function as a collaborative team that desire nothing but the return of man to his pre fallen state Furthermore God is not even able to dominate in this aspect because human agency and free will are not abandoned Not only will the Son sacrifice himself pre emptively in Book 3 for the not yet occurred Fall of Man but Man himself will have a role in his own salvation To successfully navigate atonement humanity will have to admit and repent of their former disobedience C S Lewis also rebutted the approach of people like Empson super imposing their own interpretations with an agenda onto the poem long after it was written Lewis wrote The first qualification for judging any piece of workmanship from a corkscrew to a cathedral is to know what it is what it was intended to do and how it is meant to be used 37 Lewis said the poem was a genuine Christian morality tale 33 page needed In Lewis s book A Preface to Paradise Lost he discusses the theological similarities between Paradise Lost and St Augustine and says that The Fall is simply and solely Disobedience doing what you have been told not to do and it results from Pride from being too big for your boots forgetting your place thinking that you are God 38 A summary of the book reads Considering this story within the context of the Western literary tradition Lewis offers invaluable insights into Paradise Lost and the nature of literature itself unveiling the poem s beauty and its wisdom With a clarity of thought and a style that are the trademarks of Lewis s writing he provides answers with a lucidity and lightness that deepens our understanding of Milton s immortal work Also inspiring new readers to revisit Paradise Lost Lewis reminds us of why elements including ritual splendour and joy deserve to exist and hold a sacred place in human life 39 Style editMilton used a number of acrostics in the poem In Book 9 a verse describing the serpent which tempted Eve to eat the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden spells out SATAN 9 510 while elsewhere in the same book Milton spells out FFAALL and FALL 9 333 Respectively these probably represent the double fall of humanity embodied in Adam and Eve as well as Satan s fall from Heaven 40 Blank verse edit Main articles Blank verse and John Milton s poetic style Blank verse was not much used in the non dramatic poetry of the 17th century until Paradise Lost in which Milton used it with much license and tremendous skill Milton used the flexibility of blank verse and its capacity to support syntactic complexity to the utmost Milton also wrote Paradise Regained and parts of Samson Agonistes in blank verse Although Milton was not the first to use blank verse his use of it was very influential and he became known for the style When Miltonic verse became popular Samuel Johnson mocked Milton for inspiring bad blank verse but he recognized that Milton s verse style was very influential 41 Poets such as Alexander Pope whose final incomplete work was intended to be written in the form 42 and John Keats who complained that he relied too heavily on Milton 43 adopted and picked up various aspects of his poetry In particular Miltonic blank verse became the standard for those attempting to write English epics for centuries following the publication of Paradise Lost and his later poetry 44 The poet Robert Bridges analyzed his versification in the monograph Milton s Prosody Interpretation and critique edit nbsp Plate prefacing Book 3 Creation of Man engraving by Michael Burghers based on John Baptist Medina from the 1688 edition Eighteenth century critics edit The writer and critic Samuel Johnson wrote that Paradise Lost shows off Milton s peculiar power to astonish and that Milton seems to have been well acquainted with his own genius and to know what it was that Nature had bestowed upon him more bountifully than upon others the power of displaying the vast illuminating the splendid enforcing the awful darkening the gloomy and aggravating the dreadful 45 William Blake famously wrote in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell The reason Milton wrote in fetters when he wrote of Angels amp God and at liberty when of Devils amp Hell is because he was a true Poet and of the Devil s party without knowing it 46 This quotation succinctly represents the way in which some 18th and 19th century English Romantic poets viewed Milton Christian epic edit Tobias Gregory wrote that Milton was the most theologically learned among early modern epic poets He was moreover a theologian of great independence of mind and one who developed his talents within a society where the problem of divine justice was debated with particular intensity 47 Gregory says that Milton is able to establish divine action and his divine characters in a superior way to other Renaissance epic poets including Ludovico Ariosto or Torquato Tasso 48 In Paradise Lost Milton also ignores the traditional epic format of a plot based on a mortal conflict between opposing armies with deities watching over and occasionally interfering with the action Instead both divinity and humanity are involved in a conflict that while momentarily ending in tragedy offers a future salvation 48 In both Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained Milton incorporates aspects of Lucan s epic model the epic from the view of the defeated Although he does not accept the model completely within Paradise Regained he incorporates the anti Virgilian anti imperial epic tradition of Lucan 49 Milton goes further than Lucan in this belief and Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained carry further too the movement toward and valorization of romance that Lucan s tradition had begun to the point where Milton s poems effectively create their own new genre 50 Iconography editSee also William Blake s illustrations of Paradise Lost The first illustrations to accompany the text of Paradise Lost were added to the fourth edition of 1688 with one engraving prefacing each book of which up to eight of the twelve were by Sir John Baptist Medina one by Bernard Lens II and perhaps up to four including Books I and XII perhaps the most memorable by another hand 51 The engraver was Michael Burghers given as Burgesse in some sources 52 By 1730 the same images had been re engraved on a smaller scale by Paul Fourdrinier Some of the most notable illustrators of Paradise Lost included William Blake Gustave Dore and Henry Fuseli However the epic s illustrators also include John Martin Edward Francis Burney Richard Westall Francis Hayman and many others Outside of book illustrations the epic has also inspired other visual works by well known painters like Salvador Dali who executed a set of ten colour engravings in 1974 53 Milton s achievement in writing Paradise Lost while blind he dictated to helpers inspired loosely biographical paintings by both Fuseli 54 and Eugene Delacroix 55 nbsp In Sin Death and the Devil 1792 James Gillray caricatured the political battle between Pitt and Thurlow as a scene from Paradise Lost Pitt is Death and Thurlow Satan with Queen Charlotte as Sin in the middle nbsp The Shepherd s Dream from Paradise Lost Henry Fuseli 1793 nbsp John Martin Eve s Dream Satan Aroused from Paradise Lost 1824 1827 Mezzotint plate 14 20 2 cm Museum of Fine Arts HoustonSee also editParadise Lost in popular culture John Milton s poetic style Paradise Regained Visio TnugdaliReferences editCitations edit Milton 1674 Paradise Lost Introduction Dartmouth College Archived from the original on 24 May 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2010 a b John Milton Poetry Foundation 19 April 2018 a b c Leonard 2000 p xii Leonard 2000 p xiii Broadbent 1972 p 54 Abrahm M H Stephen Greenblatt eds The Norton Anthology of English Literature New York Norton 2000 Matthew H C G Harrison B eds 23 September 2004 Matthew Simmons et al Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 69230 Retrieved 27 July 2023 Subscription or UK public library membership required Forsythe Neil 2002 The Satanic Epic Princeton University Teskey Gordon 2005 Introduction Paradise Lost A Norton Critical Edition New York Norton pp xxvii xxviii ISBN 978 0393924282 Carey John 22 July 1999 Danielson Dennis ed Milton s Satan The Cambridge Companion to Milton 2 ed Cambridge University Press pp 160 174 doi 10 1017 ccol052165226x 011 ISBN 978 0 521 65226 1 retrieved 2 May 2022 A Preface to Paradise Lost www somesmart com Retrieved 26 December 2023 Damon S Foster Eaves Morris 1988 A Blake dictionary the ideas and symbols of William Blake Rev ed with a new foreword and annotated bibliography ed Hanover N H London University press of New England for Brown university press ISBN 978 0 87451 436 0 Carey John 22 July 1999 Danielson Dennis ed Milton s Satan The Cambridge Companion to Milton 2 ed Cambridge University Press p 161 doi 10 1017 ccol052165226x 011 ISBN 978 0 521 65226 1 retrieved 2 May 2022 Brown Devin 8 September 2010 Corkscrews Cathedrals and the Chronicles of Narnia Official Site CSLewis com Retrieved 26 December 2023 Marshall 1961 p 17 Milton 1674 12 310 314 Lehnhof 2004 p 15 Milton 1674 4 42 43 Lehnhof 2004 p 24 Johnson Kimberly 2012 Raphael s Potent Tongue Power and Spectacle in Paradise Lost Milton Quarterly 46 4 205 218 doi 10 1111 milt 12010 ISSN 0026 4326 JSTOR 24462156 Van Nuis 2000 p 50 a b Mikics 2004 p 22 Mikics 2004 Biberman 1999 p 137 Milton 1674 Book 11 Lyle 2000 p 139 a b Harding 2007 p 163 Lyle 2000 p 140 Lyle 2000 p 147 Lewalski 2003 p 223 Rebhorn Wayne A The Humanist Tradition and Milton s Satan The Conservative as Revolutionary SEL Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 vol 13 no 1 The English Renaissance Winter 1973 pp 81 93 a b c d e f Leonard John Introduction Paradise Lost New York Penguin 2000 peterwebster 20 November 2007 William Empson against the Christians Webstory Retrieved 26 December 2023 Haffenden John 2 November 2006 William Empson Against the Christians Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 383 04203 0 Kapelos Peters Alexandra 27 November 2007 Milton s just merciful and redemptive God www alexandrakp com Retrieved 26 December 2023 David 18 July 2023 S6E34 AH Jack s Bookshelf John Milton After Hours with Graeme Donaldson Pints With Jack Retrieved 26 December 2023 A Preface to Paradise Lost www somesmart com Retrieved 26 December 2023 A Preface to Paradise Lost by C S Lewis www shakespeareandcompany com Retrieved 26 December 2023 Phaal Miranda 2019 The Treble Fall An Interlocking Acrostic in Paradise Lost Milton Quarterly 53 1 67 68 doi 10 1111 milt 12285 ISSN 1094 348X S2CID 202372407 Greene 1989 p 27harvnb error no target CITEREFGreene1989 help Brisman 1973 pp 7 8harvnb error no target CITEREFBrisman1973 help Keats 1899 p 408harvnb error no target CITEREFKeats1899 help Bate 1962 pp 66 67harvnb error no target CITEREFBate1962 help Johnson Samuel Lives of the English Poets New York Octagon 1967 Blake William The Marriage of Heaven and Hell 1793 Gregory 2006 p 178harvnb error no target CITEREFGregory2006 help a b 2006 pp 178 179harvnb error no target CITEREF2006 help Quint 1993 pp 325 326harvnb error no target CITEREFQuint1993 help Quint 1993 p 340harvnb error no target CITEREFQuint1993 help Illustrating Paradise Lost Archived 1 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine from Christ s College Cambridge has all twelve on line See Medina s article for more on the authorship and all the illustrations which are also in Commons William Bridges Hunter 1978 A Milton encyclopedia Bucknell University Press p 58 ISBN 978 0 8387 1837 7 Lockport Street Gallery Retrieved on 2013 12 13 Art Institute of Chicago Retrieved on 2013 12 13 WikiPaintings Retrieved on 2013 12 13 Bibliography edit Biberman M January 1999 Milton Marriage and a Woman s Right to Divorce SEL Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 39 1 131 153 doi 10 2307 1556309 JSTOR 1556309 Broadbent John 1972 Paradise Lost Introduction Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521096393 Harding P January 2007 Milton s Serpent and the Birth of Pagan Error SEL Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 47 1 161 177 doi 10 1353 sel 2007 0003 S2CID 161758649 Lehnhof K 2004 Paradise Lost and the Concept of Creation South Central Review 21 2 15 41 doi 10 1353 scr 2004 0021 S2CID 13244028 Leonard John 2000 Introduction in Milton John ed Paradise Lost New York Penguin ISBN 9780140424393 Lewalski B January 2003 Milton and Idolatry SEL Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 43 1 213 232 doi 10 1353 sel 2003 0008 S2CID 170082234 Lyle J January 2000 Architecture and Idolatry in Paradise Lost SEL Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 40 1 139 155 doi 10 2307 1556158 JSTOR 1556158 Marshall W H January 1961 Paradise Lost Felix Culpa and the Problem of Structure Modern Language Notes 76 1 15 20 doi 10 2307 3040476 JSTOR 3040476 Mikics D 2004 Miltonic Marriage and the Challenge to History in Paradise Lost Texas Studies in Literature and Language 46 1 20 48 doi 10 1353 tsl 2004 0005 S2CID 161371845 Milton J 1674 Paradise Lost 2nd ed London S Simmons Van Nuis H May 2000 Animated Eve Confronting Her Animus A Jungian Approach to the Division of Labor Debate in Paradise Lost Milton Quarterly 34 2 48 56 doi 10 1111 j 1094 348X 2000 tb00619 xFurther reading editJohn Milton A Short Introduction 2002 ed paperback by Roy C Flannagan Oxford Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 22620 8 2008 ed ebook by Roy Flannagan Massachusetts Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 470 69287 5 Al Akhras Sharihan Green Mandy 2017 Satanic whispers Milton s Iblis and the Great Sultan The Seventeenth Century 32 1 pp 31 50 doi 10 1080 0268117X 2016 1252279 Black J ed March 2007 Paradise Lost The Broadview Anthology of British Literature vol A Concise ed Peterborough Ontario Broadview Press pp 998 1061 ISBN 978 1 55111 868 0 OCLC 75811389 Bradford R July 1992 Paradise Lost 1st ed Philadelphia Open University Press ISBN 978 0 335 09982 5 OCLC 25050319 Forsyth N 2003 The Satanic Epic Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11339 5 Frye N 1965 The Return of Eden Five Essays on Milton s Epics Toronto University of Toronto Press Kerrigan W ed 2007 The Complete Poetry and Essential Prose of John Milton New York Random House ISBN 978 0 679 64253 4 OCLC 81940956 Miller T C ed 1997 The Critical Response to John Milton s Paradise Lost Westport Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 28926 2 OCLC 35762631 Patrides C A The Age of Milton Backgrounds to Seventeenth century Literature Manchester University 1980 ISBN 0 7190 0770 4 Walker Julia M 1998 Medusa s Mirrors Spenser Shakespeare Milton and the Metamorphosis of the Female Self University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 0 87413 625 8External links editParadise Lost at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Gustave Dore Paradise Lost Illustrations from the university at Buffalo Libraries Major Online Resources on Paradise Lost archived 6 February 2011 nbsp Paradise Lost public domain audiobook at LibriVoxOnline text edit Paradise Lost at Standard Ebooks Project Gutenberg text version 1 Project Gutenberg text version 2Other information edit darkness visible comprehensive site for students and others new to Milton contexts plot and character summaries reading suggestions critical history gallery of illustrations of Paradise Lost and much more By students at Milton s Cambridge college Christ s College Selected bibliography at the Milton Reading Room includes background biography criticism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paradise Lost amp oldid 1195157328, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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