Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Milton Paradise Lost Commentary

The Renaissance era represents a complete break with the Middle Ages on a semipolitical, philosophical, scientifical and theological scale. Indeed, the discovery of new territories and the expeditions of explorers such as Francis Drake, the revival meeting of classic writtings, the new scientific outbreaks of Copernicus, Newton and Galilei as well as the Protestant reformation led by Luther and his 95 Theses, triggered a give for knowledge and a quest for truth, olibanum putting an revoke to the intellect hegemony of the Roman Catholic Church in Western Europe.Intellectuals of this era began to cogitate on mankind, looking for answers outside of the Religious constraints. Written during this context of political and religious upheaval, Paradise Lost, an epic poem published in 1667 in ten books, reflects in a way the great changes of the Renaissance. This poem, written by John Milton (December 1608 November 1674), an English poet, polemicist and civil servant, tell the Christia n paper of the creation of the Earth, the fall of daemon and the Fall of Man.As a puritan, Milton, who had already attacked the Church for its corruption in Lycidas (1637), give this classical Christian bilgewater puritan traits (such as the protrayal of Eve as a dedicated worker). The act under study is taken from Book 9 of Paradise lost. In this book, the narrator foc usances on the disobedience of exaltation and Eve. fiend returns to the Garden of promised land eight days after his ban by Gabriel to avenge himself. Adam and Eve , preparing for their labors, decide to work separatly , eventideningn if Adam is anxious that eve would be an easy prey to matchs lure .In this passage we evoke resonate the approach of the morning star , (the serpent) and the begining of his temptation that result lead Eve to eat the prohibited fruit. We female genital organ intelligibly see that Milton here uses a mix of Classical and Judeo-christian falsehoodology to tell this tale . We chiffonier thus wonder In which way he uses these influences, and why he uses them ? In a first part we leave behind see that the ophidian is a symbol of temptation, and in a second part we wll crumble Miltons uses of Classical mythology. First, Milton depicts the snake which dickens is possessing, as an incredibly stunning wildcat.The main strategy of Satan to try to corrupt the naive thought of Eve is to appear as a magnificent snake. According to the narrator, his carnal appearance is so pleasing that never a snake allow be as beautiful (on verse 504 pleasing was his shape, and lovely, never since a serpent lovelier). To describe the snake, the narrator use the lexical field of rare material carbuncle his eyes on verse 500, neck of verdent gold on verse 501. Here Satan seems to have chosen a snake whose appearance can attract Eve only because his similitude with unique material.In a kind of materialist temptation, he tries to appeal to Eve familiar sin of cupid ity to take a crap her. But there is something paradoxical in the way the snake is depicted as a beautiful creature. Indeed, the snake is often assimilated with death, the venom of some species of snakes such as the cobra can down a man in less than one hour. It also an animal that generate intellective fear in most human (and occurence of Ophidiophobia can be found everywhere). Here death and beauty become assimilated in one animal.It can thus be perceived as avatar of the treachery of satan behind the beaty of his rethoric, of his discourse hides a terrible fates, the banishment of Man from Heaven. This can also underline the interest of humans for macabre, fantasm topics. We can see since the dawn of age exemples of this morbid attraction of the man race public executions had always (and still do) gathered a muddle of people around the death of a single man as well as we can see every day the reach (and also its capacity of generating profits) of a news involving the myst erious death of a movie star, of the murder of a whole family by its patriarch.As we know, Satan has chosen this animal, maybe he relies on this fascination to attract eve attention. We can also notice that the serpent can be taken as a phallic symbol. On verse 498 to 502 the snake is describe as a circular base that towered folds above folds a surprise maze with burnished neck erect amidst his circling spires. frankincense the snake appears as a symbol of virility, a phallic form erecting from the priming and can be understood as another strategy of Satan to cajole Eve into trusting him.On the other hand this golf links made by Milton amidst sensuality and religion can be seen as a hint of the influence of the metaphysical poetry on his writting this link beeing one of the interest of the metaphysical poets who were contemporary with Milton. Then the snake can be analysed as a symbol of corruption and of perfidy. Satan uses a disguise, a snake to talk to eve. He uses his bea uty, his eloquence to seduce her. His wave movements, looking like a dance, and his attitude (Fawning, and licking the principle whereon she strod on verse 526) can be interpreted as a nuptial parade with the snake laying on the primal instinct (which are restricted by religion) of Man to attract Eve in his trap. It is also interesting to note that the occurence of the word Satan is, as Satan himself, disguised in this passage. Here Satan is refered to as the snake or the enemy of mankind on verse 494. The word Satan can only be seen if the reader looks closely at the poem an acrostic is hidden from verse 510 to 515. This clever technic reflects the vicious strategy of the Devil in the passage. Satans main strategy to talk Eve into beliving that she has the duty to eat the apple is flattery.The Devil choose to tempt Eve because he was afraid of Adams intelligence which could have be an bar to his scheme. Thus he constantly celebrate eve beauty and superiority of others graven im ages creature to put her in a federal agency where she can feel free to act as she wants. From verse 532 to the end of the passage the snake states that eve is sole wonder, that she is a universally admired celestial beauty that should be a goddes among gods, adored and served by angels numberless. The snake thus seems to contradict Gods Hierarchy of creation, The capital concatenation of Being.According to him, Eve is higher than all the other creations of god, and should be sit down just next to god, just as the Holy Spirit and Jesus. In this passage the snake is the voices that question god agentity and urges Eve to more than freedom which appears, in the eyes of God as an Heresy. Hence a parallel can be cadaverous betwen the questioning of Gods Hierarchy by the snakes and the questioning of Gods Hierarchy by the new theories about cosmos expressed by scientists such as Copernic who were at the time seen as Heretics, devilish prophets and treated as such. at present that we have seen in which way the snakes represents a symbol of temptation embodying as well as the Biblical symbol of sin, the Renaissance questioning of Gods Hierarchy, we are going to see and analyse Miltons use of Classic Mythology in this passage. First Miltons use of Classic quality in his text can be interpreted as a perversions of those myths. In this passage he uses three myth to illustrate the action. He first refers to the tale of Hermione and Cadmus taken from Metamorphoses written by Ovid in AD 8.According to this classic of Latin literature they were both modify into snakes in an act of vengence from the Gods. Then he refers to transformation of Amonian Jove and Capitoline into snakes to seduce and mate with Olympias and the take of Scipio to give birth of two of the most famous and glorious warfare chief of both hellenistic and Roman era Alexander the Great and Scipio Africanus. We can notice that Milton cleverly used myth in which the snakes as a role close to the one it has in the Bible.Concerning Ovid, the snakes is an object of temptation for which Hermione yields and is thus punished by being transformed in a snake. Concerning the myth of the birth of Alexender and Scipio, the snakes, just as in the Bible, is in concomitant a deity in disguise, seducing a woman. But if we look closely, these myth appeared to be perverted. In the classical myth, the deity or characters who are transformed into a snake are great and nobles characters Cadmus is the founder of Thebes, and Amonian Jove and Capitoline are Jupiter.In paradise lost, the snake is Satan, the personification of rebellion against Gods will and of all the Human Sins. In this antithetic linking of diverse mythology, Milton wants to contrast Satan perfidy with classical characters nobility while underlining common themes. He thus appeals to a particular knowledge of his readers. On the other hand , the authors use of classical mythology in this text can be seen as another influence of the metaphysical poetry on the Milton. concoction diverse sources of knowledge to build his imagery is a technic used by metaphysiacal poets such as John Donne.But when others metaphysical poets tangled scientific, geographical, astronomical discoveries with theology and philospy, Milton just mixed Judeo-christian religious myths with classical myths. dismantle if this influence is small, it is sufficient to guess that Milton, contemporaneous with Donne, Herbert, Henry or Crashaw, has drawn some inspiration from the work of these poets. Moreover, Milton use of Classical mythology is representative of the Renaissance. Indeed, it clearly illustrates the resurgence of classical works during this era.Every arts had been affected by this tendency, in paintings, the classical style was a new fashion, the subjects taken from classical mythology began to be more and more numerous, Michaelangelo being a good exemple in both the sculpture and painting field. This resurgence has also an impac t on architecture (with the building of houses, mansions, official buildign following the principle of the straight line) , on philosophy ( the raison and the re-reading of the platonician and socratic philosophy) as well as on literature.Thus Milton appears as an exemple of this new interest ofr the classical literrature, and htis work, Paradise lost, embodies this feature of the Renaissance. Finally, as we have seen, Milton uses his main influence, the Bible, to depicts the snake as a symbol of temptation and perfidy and uses his other influence, the classical mythology, in a perversion of the myths to kick downstairs his imagery. Furthermore, analysing this text, we can see that Milton was also influenced by the Metaphysical Poets in his uses of mixed sources as well as the use of the theme of the link between sensuality and religion.This book, which is now one of the most famous piece of side poetry, had a great influence on following artists such as Blake who considered Milton as the major English Poet and Edmond Burke and the Romantic theory, asserting No person seems better to have understood the secret of heightening, or of move terrible things, if I may use the expression, in their strongest light, by the issue of a judicious obscurity than Milton. , valuating his exploration of blank verse. Milton also had a great impact on the English language by creating mintage that are still used today such as pand?monium, enslaved, mephistophelian and self-esteem.

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