Milton is giving
himself authority by
crediting his work to
the Holy Spirit
Classical reference
Uses poetic
conventions
Book 3 lines 55 - 79
11/2/11 - two lines about love
directly sandwiched between
pure nature and corrupt
nature
Milton is implying that
pure love seperates
corruption and purity
Similar patterns
used throughout
"Of man's first
disobedience and the
fruit of the forbidden
tree"
the f alliteration draws
attention to those three
words - emphasis
Creates a second
sentence; "first fruit
forbidden" - double dissonance
Makes use of
symbols
eg. Heaven/God = light
Hell is "far removed from
God and light of heaven"
Out of the light
and out of God's
favour
The reader is plunged straight into the
action as Satan wakes up on the lake of fire
Sensationalised tale
Hell Mirroring Heaven
Hell has similarities to heaven, but
usually displays them as warped
Satan has 12 main followers
- reminiscent of the twelve
disciples of Christ but once
again corrupt
Similar topography to the
Earth itself (and Heaven) but
chaotic/corrupt
More like a democracy then
Heaven but Satan is still "king"
Beelzebub sarcastically calls him "Prince of Hell"
Hell still has hierarchy of angels
Satan's followers are angels, but they have
been grotesquel disfigured by their fall
"Unholy Trinity"
Satan / Sin / Death
Borne from lust
Hideous
Milton's personal view
highlighted - lust
negative
This is also present after Adam and Eve eat
from the Tree of Knowledge and have sex driven
by lust (it is implied by the conversations
between Raphael and Adam that they had
previously been itimate; but this is different and
part of their fall.)
Parallels God (the Father) / The Son /
The Holy Spirit
Personifying concepts was a common tool
Earlier : Faerie Queene
Kind of subtle
Later: The Pilgrim's Progress
Blatant
Political Implications
Critics believe that within the council
of hell there are many subtle
references to politicians of the day
Would require more knowledge
Anti-Catholic
Temple of Satan book 5 is a
reference to St Peter's Catheral in
Rome -- centre of Catholic Church
Sin and Death build bridge between Hell and
Earth to allow themselves and Satan to
travel between - as well as welcome Man
"wondrous Pontifice"
Used in Reference to Catholic Pope - Milton commenting
that Catholicism is basically path to Hell
Satan's Democracy vs God's Monarchy
Satan believes that he was "serving" under
God, and himself holds parliament and
discussion within Hell but the outcome is
evil
God is an autocratic ruler but is shown very positively
Milton feelings about Charles' execution? - examplifies
that right actions done for the wrong reasons (eg.
pride/greed/vanity) or carried out irrationally are not right.
"paradise of fools" between
earth and heaven
Calvinism?
Satan
Some critics believe that
Satan is the central
character / protagonist of
the poem
Especially during romantic era
Satan is a charismatic leader who hides
his manipulation well
God - "Man will hearken to his glozing lies"
"Better to reign in Hell than
serve in heaven"
"Make a heaven out of Hell"
Portrayal onwards of book 4 begins to sour his image
Laments his loss upon seeing Adam and Eve
Consistantly changing form to lesser beings -
Cherub / Toad / Snake
Has become true monstrosity by the end of the poem - moral decay
Was second to God - felt that he should be God's equal and felt affronted
to be expected to bow to The Son
Staged a three day revolt that saw him expelled from heaven
"Fall" image will be ongoing throughout the poem
Adam and Eve realise that they wll be
able to redeem themselves by pleasing
God voluntarily
Satan does not believe that he will be better
off in Heaven so stubbornly refuses to
accept his fate -- fixates on displeasing God
further
Good vs Evil
Obvious
"Justify the ways of God to men"
Milton is exploring the tale of the Fall of
Satan/Mankind and also the cosmic battle of Good v
Evil
Book 7 Raphael explains that man were created to work their way into Heaven
The devils' conversations
Moloch
Go to war on God
"victory is yet revenge"
Belial
God would not kill them, why not
stay in Hell and accept their fate and
perhaps be forgiven
Mammon
create and equal force
Beelzebub
None of these will work - they will never be true rulers of Hell - far
from God but still part of his control, war will not suceed as Heaven is
stronger and submission will not yield forgiveness
The only true revenge they can have is upon earth; but
corrupting God's creation man
Milton suggests that good and evil are
only equal within people and that is the
only way evil can triumph