89-) English Literature
John Milton
While
Milton’s impact as a prose writer was profound, of equal or greater importance
is his poetry. He referred to his prose works as the achievements of his “left
hand.” Like the illustrious literary forebears with whom he invites comparison,
Milton used his poetry to address issues of religion and politics, the central
concerns also of his prose. Placing himself in a line of poets whose art was an
outlet for their public voice and using, like them, the pastoral poem to
present an outlook on politics, Milton aimed to promote an enlightened
commonwealth, not unlike the polis of Greek antiquity or the cultured
city-states in Renaissance Italy. In 1645 he published his first volume of
poetry, Poems of Mr. John Milton , Both English and Latin, much of which was
written before he was twenty years old. The volume manifests a rising poet, one
who has planned his emergence and projected his development in numerous ways:
mastery of ancient and modern languages—Greek, Latin, Hebrew, Italian;
awareness of various traditions in literature; and avowed inclination toward
the vocation of poet. The poems in the 1645 edition run the gamut of various
genres: psalm paraphrase, sonnet, canzone, masque, pastoral elegy, verse
letter, English ode, epigram, obituary poem, companion poem, and occasional
verse. Ranging from religious to political in subject matter, serious to
mock-serious in tone, and traditional to innovative in the use of verse forms,
the poems in this volume disclose a self-conscious author whose maturation is
undertaken with certain models in mind, notably Virgil from classical antiquity
and Edmund Spenser in the English Renaissance. When one considers that the 1645
volume was published when Milton was approximately thirty-seven years old,
though some of the poems were written as early as his fifteenth year, it is
evident that he sought to draw attention to his unfolding poetic career despite
its interruption by governmental service. Perhaps he also sought to highlight
the relationship of his poetry to his prose and to call attention to his
aspiration, evident in several works in the 1645 volume, to become an epic
poet. Thus, the poems in the volume were composed in Stuart England but
published after the onset of the English Civil War. Furthermore, Milton may
have begun to compose one or more of his mature works—Paradise Lost, Paradise
Regained, and Samson Agonistes—in the 1640s, but they were completed and
revised much later and not published until after the Restoration.
This
literary genius whose fame and influence are second to none, and on whose life
and works more commentary is written than on any author except Shakespeare, was
born at 6:30 in the morning on 9 December 1608. His parents were John Milton ,
Sr., and Sara Jeffrey Milton , and the place of birth was the family home,
marked with the sign of the spread eagle, on Bread Street, London. Three days
later, at the parish church of All Hallows, also on Bread Street, he was
baptized into the Protestant faith of the Church of England. Other children of
John and Sara who survived infancy included Anne, their oldest child, and
Christopher, seven years younger than John. At least three others died shortly
after birth, in infancy or in early childhood. Edward Phillips, Anne’s son by
her first husband, was tutored by Milton and later wrote a biography of his
renowned uncle, which was published in Milton’s Letters of State (1694).
Christopher, in contrast to his older brother on all counts, became a Roman
Catholic, a Royalist, and a lawyer.
Milton’s
father was born in 1562 in Oxfordshire; his father, Richard, was a Catholic who
decried the Reformation. When John Milton, Sr., expressed sympathy for what his
father viewed as Protestant heresy, their disagreements resulted in the son’s
disinheritance. He left home and traveled to London, where he became a
scrivener and a professional composer responsible for more than twenty musical
pieces. As a scrivener he performed services comparable to a present-day
attorney’s assistant, law stationer, and notary. Among the documents that a
scrivener executed were wills, leases, deeds, and marriage agreements. Through
such endeavors and by his practice of money lending, the elder Milton
accumulated a handsome estate, which enabled him to provide a splendid formal
education for his son John and to maintain him during several years of private
study. In “Ad Patrem” (To His Father), a Latin poem composed probably in
1637-1638, Milton celebrated his “revered father.” He compares his father’s
talent at musical composition, harmonizing sounds to numbers and modulating the
voices of singers, to his own dedication to the muses and to his developing
artistry as a poet. The father’s “generosities” and “kindnesses” enabled the
young man to study Greek, Latin, Hebrew, French, and Italian.”
Little
is known of Sara Jeffrey, but in Pro Propulo Anglicano Defensio Secunda (The
Second Defense of the People of England, 1654) Milton refers to the “esteem” in
which his mother was held and to her reputation for almsgiving in their
neighborhood. John Aubrey, in biographical notes made in 1681-1682, recorded
that she had weak eyesight, which may have contributed to her son’s similar
problems. She died on 3 April 1637, not long before her son John departed for
his European journey. Her husband died on 14 March 1647.”
In
the years 1618-1620 Milton was tutored in the family home. One of his tutors
was Thomas Young, who became chaplain to the English merchants in Hamburg
during the 1620s. Though he departed England when Milton was approximately
eleven years old, Young’s impression on the young pupil was long standing. Two
of Milton’s familiar letters, as well as “Elegia quarta” (Elegy IV), are
addressed to Young. (The term elegy in the titles of seven of Milton’s Latin
poems designates the classical prosody in which they were written, couplets
consisting of a verse of dactylic hexameter followed by a verse of pentameter;
elegy, when used to describe poems of sorrow or lamentation, refers to Milton’s
meditations on the deaths of particular persons.) Also dedicated to Young is Of
Reformation (1641), a prose tract; and the “TY” of the acronym SMECTYMNUUS in
the title of Milton’s antiprelatical tract of 1641 identifies Young as one of
the five ministers whose stand against church government by bishops was admired
by Milton.”
From
1620 until 1625 Milton attended St. Paul’s School, within close walking
distance of his home and within view of the cathedral, where almost certainly
he heard the sermons of Dr. John Donne, who served as dean from 1621 until
1631. The school had been founded in the preceding century by John Colet, and
the chief master when Milton attended was Alexander Gill the Elder. His son,
also named Alexander and an instructor at the school, did not teach Milton .
Some of Milton’s familiar letters are addressed to the elder and the younger
Gills, with whom he maintained contact, chiefly to express gratitude for their
commitment to learning and to communicate to them his unfolding plans and
aspirations. During his years at St. Paul’s, Milton befriended Charles Diodati,
who became his closest companion in boyhood and to whom he wrote “Elegia prima”
(Elegy I) and “Elegia sexta” (Elegy VI). They maintained their friendship even
though Diodati attended Oxford while Milton was at Cambridge.”
On
9 April 1625 Milton , then sixteen years of age, matriculated at Christ’s
College, Cambridge, evidently in preparation for the ministry. For seven years
he studied assiduously to receive the bachelor of arts degree (1629) and the
master of arts degree (1632). With his first tutor at Cambridge, the logician
William Chappell, Milton had some sort of disagreement, after which he may have
been whipped. Thereafter, in the Lent term of 1626, Milton was rusticated or
suspended, a circumstance to which he refers in “Elegia prima.” After his
return to Cambridge later that year and for the remainder of his years there he
was tutored by Nathaniel Tovey. At Cambridge Milton was known as “The Lady of
Christ’s,” to which he refers in his sixth prolusion, an oratorical performance
and academic exercise that he presented in 1628. While the reasons for the
sobriquet are uncertain, one suspects that Milton’s appearance seemed feminine
to some onlookers. In fact, this theory is supported by a portrait of Milton
commissioned by his father when the future poet was ten years old. The delicate
features, pink-and-white complexion, and auburn hair, not to mention the black
doublet with gold braid and the collar with lace frills, project a somewhat
feminine image. Another portrait, painted while he was a student at Cambridge,
shows a handsome youth, appearing somewhat younger than his twenty-one years.
His long hair falls to the white ruff collar that he wears over a black
doublet. His dark brown hair has a reddish cast to it, and his complexion is
fair. Apart from his appearance, Milton may have been called “The Lady of
Christ’s” because his commitment to study caused him to withdraw from the more typical
male activities of athletics and socializing.”
By
1632 Milton had completed a sizable body of poetry. At St. Paul’s he had
translated and paraphrased Psalms 114 and 136 from Greek into English.
Throughout his Cambridge years he composed many of the poems in the 1645
volume: the seven Latin elegies (three verse letters, two funeral tributes, a
celebration of spring, and an acknowledgment of the power of Cupid), other
Latin verse, seven prolusions, six or seven sonnets (some in Italian), and
numerous poems in English. The works in English include “On the Morning of
Christ’s Nativity,” “The Passion,” “On Shakespeare,” the Hobson poems,
“L’Allegro,” and “Il Penseroso.”
The
circumstances of composition of Milton’s Nativity poem, classified as an ode,
are recounted in “Elegia sexta,” a verse letter written to Diodati in early
1630. To his close friend Milton confided that the poem was composed at dawn on
Christmas day in December 1629. In “Elegia sexta” Milton summarizes the poem,
which, he says, sings of the “heaven-descended King, the bringer of peace, and
the blessed times promised in the sacred books.” Likewise, the Christ child
“and his stabling under a mean roof” are contrasted with the “gods that were
suddenly destroyed in their own shrines” (translation by Merritt Y. Hughes).
“On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity” is divided into two sections, the
induction and the hymn. The induction is composed of four stanzas in rime
royal, a seven-line stanza of iambic pentameter; the hymn consists of
twenty-seven stanzas, each eight lines long, combining features of rime royal
and the Spenserian stanza. The poem develops thematic opposition between the
pagan gods—associated with darkness, dissonance, and bestiality—and
Christ—associated with light, harmony, and the union of divine and human
natures.”
In
addition to the contrasting themes, the poem addresses two of the major
paradoxes or mysteries of Christianity: the Virgin Birth and the two natures of
Christ. By using oxymoron or succinct paradox—”wedded Maid, and Virgin
Mother”—to describe Mary, the poet suggests the mystery of the Virgin Birth,
whereby Mary retains her purity and chastity despite impregnation by the
godhead. To describe the combination of two natures in Christ, the poet resorts
to biblical allusion, particularly Paul’s letter to the Philippians (2:6-11),
which recounts how the Son emptied himself of his godhead in order to take on
humanity. Paul states that the Son having assumed the form of a servant or
slave was obedient unto death on the cross. In the Nativity poem Milton
indicates that the Son, while customarily enthroned “in Trinal Unity,” has
“laid aside” his majesty to undergo suffering. By such biblical allusion Milton
interrelates the Incarnation and Redemption. Paradoxically, Milton affirms that
the heroism of the Son is attributable to his voluntary humiliation, so that,
in effect, his triumph over the pagan gods is anticlimactic. Significantly, in
a poem about the birth of the Savior, Milton foreshadows the death of Jesus,
the consummate gesture of voluntary humiliation. The manger is described as a
place of self-sacrifice, where the light from the star overhead and the
metaphoric reference to the fires of immolation converge: “secret altar touched
with hallowed fire.”
Not
to be overlooked is Milton’s use of mythological allusions to dramatize the
effect of Christ’s coming. Thus, the Christ child is characterized as
triumphant over his pagan adversaries, one of whom, Typhon, is “huge ending in
snaky twine.” Typhon, the hundred-headed serpent and a leader of the Titans,
rebelled against Zeus, who cast a thunderbolt against him. After his downfall
he was incarcerated under Mount Aetna and tormented by the active volcano. Such
myths were typically related to the Hebraic-Christian tradition in numerous
ways: in illustrated Renaissance dictionaries and encyclopedias, editions of
Ovid’s Metamorphoses, and other lexicons known to Milton . Indeed, early
biographers report that Milton himself was planning a similar compilation and
interpretation of myths, though this work was never completed. Traditionally,
Typhon, his revolt against Zeus, and his subsequent punishment are analogues of
Satan’s rivalry of the godhead, of his downfall thereafter, and of his
everlasting torment in the fires of Hell. Thus, the triumph in the Nativity
poem looks backward to the War in Heaven while anticipating the final conquest
over Satan foretold in the Apocalypse. The appearance of Typhon as a
multiheaded serpent is further correlated by Renaissance commentators with the biblical
figure of Leviathan, the dragonlike monster associated with Satan in
interpretations of the Hebraic and Christian scriptures. At the same time, the
Christ child is likened to the infant Hercules, who overcame the serpent that
attacked him in his cradle. The foregoing examples typify how Milton’s
erudition and literary imagination enabled him to pursue and synthesize a wide
range of mythological and biblical allusions.”
Illustrated
Renaissance lexicons, along with manuals of painting, which guided artists and
authors in the use and significance of visual details, may be employed to
interpret other allegorical figures in the Nativity poem. Thus, at the birth of
the Savior, the poem recounts how “meek-eyed Peace” descends, “crowned with
Olive green,” moved by “Turtle wing,” and “waving wide her myrtle wand.” Such
visual details suggest the peace and harmony between the godhead and humankind
when the dove returned with the olive branch after the Deluge and when the Holy
Spirit, figured as a dove, descended at the baptism of the Lord.”
A
dominant feature of the Nativity poem is the frequent reference to pagan gods,
many of whom are included in the epic catalogue in book 1 of Paradise Lost
(1667). One such figure is Osiris, whose shrine in the Nativity poem is
described: “with Timbrel’d Anthems dark / the sable-stoled Sorcerers bear his
worshipt Ark.” This description suggests a funeral procession, thereby
dramatizing the causal relationship between the birth of Christ and the death
of the pagan gods. Additionally, the phrase “worshipt Ark” calls attention to
the ark of the Covenant, associated with the tablets of law from the Old
Dispensation. Christ, however, rewrites the law in the hearts of humankind, a
process to which Milton’s poem alludes. The Chosen People of the Old
Dispensation thus anticipate the faithful Christian community centered on
Jesus. The poem presents the first such community when the holy family,
shepherds, angels, and narrator unite in their adoration of the Christ child.
The narrator endeavors to join his voice to the chorus of angels so that his
sacred song and devotional lyrics are harmonized with theirs. He also informs
us of the imminent arrival of the Magi, who will enlarge the community of
worshipers and chorus of praise. Characteristically, the poem highlights unity
and harmony between humankind and the godhead, earth and Heaven, the Old and
New Dispensations.”
What
also emerges from the Nativity poem is an overriding awareness of Christian
history, which is both linear and cyclical. As time unfolded, Old Testament
events were fulfilled in Christ’s temporal ministry. Thereafter, the faithful
community looks toward the Second Coming. Along this linear disposition of time
there are recurrent foreshadowings and cyclical enactments of triumphs over
God’s adversaries. Like the Apocalypse, the Nativity poem foresees that the
ultimate defeat of Satan, having been prefigured in numerous ways, will be one
of the climactic events of Christian or providential history.”
Despite
its early date of composition, the Nativity poem foreshadows many features of
Milton’s major works: the allusions to mythology and their assimilation to the
Hebraic-Christian tradition, the conflict between the godhead and numerous
adversaries, the emphasis on voluntary humiliation as a form of Christian
heroism, the paramount importance of the redemptive ministry of the Son, and
the Christian view of history.”
Probably
intended as a companion piece to the Nativity poem, “The Passion” was written
at Easter in 1630. Only eight stanzas in rime royal were composed, presumably
as the induction. Appended to the unfinished work is a note indicating that the
author found the subject “to be above the years he had, when he wrote it, and
nothing satisfied with what was begun, left it unfinished.” The eight stanzas
clarify Milton’s unfulfilled intent: to dramatize more fully the humiliation of
the Son, “sovereign Priest” who “Poor fleshly Tabernacle entered.”
“On
Shakespeare,” Milton’s first published poem, was composed in 1630 and printed
in the Second Folio (1632) of Shakespeare’s plays, where it was included with
other eulogies and commendatory verses. Milton’s poem, a sixteen-line epigram
in heroic couplets, was included perhaps because of the intercession of his
friend and eventual collaborator Henry Lawes, a musician and composer, who
wrote the music for Milton’s Comus (1637) and probably for the songs of
“Arcades” in Milton’s 1645 Poems. Milton celebrates his friend’s musical talent
in Sonnet XIII. Milton’s poem echoes a prevalent opinion evident in other
commendatory verses—that Shakespeare, the untutored genius with only a
grammar-school education, was a natural poet whose “easy numbers flow” in
contrast to “slow-endeavoring art.” Perhaps the implied contrast is between the
spontaneity of Shakespeare and the more deliberate and learned composition of
Ben Jonson. The foregoing contrast is explicit in “L’Allegro,” where
Shakespeare’s plays, the products of “fancy’s child” who composes his “native
Wood-notes wild,” are contrasted with Jonson’s “learned Sock.” The reference to
Jonson calls attention to the sock or low shoe worn by actors during comedy, as
well as to the learned imitation of classical dramaturgy practiced by Jonson,
who had a university education. Ironically, Jonson’s commendatory poem on
Shakespeare, included in the First Folio (1623) and republished in the folios
thereafter, is the most renowned of the lot. It cites the excellence and
popularity of Shakespeare as a dramatist despite his “small Latin, and less
Greek,” an allusion, no doubt, to his lack of education beyond grammar school.
More to the point, Jonson used the metonymy of the sock to appraise
Shakespearean comedy as nonpareil: “when thy socks were on / Leave thee alone.”
Therefore, Milton may have appropriated but adapted the allusion in order to
contrast the learned and spontaneous playwrights, respectively Jonson and
Shakespeare.”
Central
to the poem is Milton’s recognition that an erected monument, possibly even the
Stratford burial site with its bust of Shakespeare, is unsuitable to
memorialize the playwright’s unique genius. Ultimately, Milton argues that
Shakespeare alone can and does create a “livelong Monument”: his readers
transfixed by wonder and awe. So long as his works are read, his readers will be
immobilized when confronting his transcendent genius. To be sure, the
inadequacy of stone or marble monuments to perpetuate one’s memory is one major
theme in Shakespeare’s sonnets; a complementary theme is the permanence of
literary art despite the mutability and upheaval in the human condition. Milton
integrates both themes from Shakespeare’s sonnets into his poem, perhaps to
emphasize that the unique achievement of Shakespeare must be memorialized by
the words and ideas of none other than the master poet and dramatist himself.
Despite his admiration for Shakespeare, Milton in his prose and poetry
explicitly referred to the playwright only three times: in Shakespeare
“L’Allegro,” and Eikonoklastes. Despite the paucity of explicit reference,
commentators have, nonetheless, sought to identify verbal parallels between the
works of Shakespeare and Milton . Though such parallels or apparent echoes
abound, they are inadequate to establish source or influence. Virtually
identical similarities may be adduced between the works of Milton and the
writings of other Elizabethans. It seems unlikely that Milton , having prepared
himself to be an author of religious and biblical poetry, relied heavily on
Shakespeare, whose dramatic works are vastly different in conception and
subject matter.”
Two
of the most amusing poems of the Cambridge years were written about Thomas
Hobson, the coachman who drove the circuit between London and Cambridge from
1564 until shortly before his death on 1 January 1631. Several of Milton’s
fellow students also wrote witty verses. In Milton’s first poem, “On the
University Carrier,” Death is personified; his attempts to claim Hobson have
been thwarted in various ways. Hobson, for instance, is described as a
“shifter,” one who has dodged Death. In effect, his perpetual motion made him
an evasive adversary until he was forced to discontinue his trips because of
the plague; then Death “got him down.” The allusion is to a wrestling match,
Hobson having been overthrown. Death is personified, in turn, as a chamberlain,
who perceives Hobson as having completed a day’s journey. He escorts the
coachman to a sleeping room, then takes away the light. The second poem,
“Another on the Same,” is more witty as it elaborates a series of paradoxes.
Thus, “an engine moved with wheel and weight” refers at once to Hobson’s
coach—the means of his livelihood—and to a timepiece. The circuit of the
coachman is likened to movement around the face of a timepiece, motion being
equated with time. The assertion that “too much breathing put him out of
breath” refers to the interruption of his travel caused by the plague. While
idle, in other words, he himself took ill and died. Furthermore, the poem
likens his former travel to the waxing and waning of the moon, a reciprocal
course of coming and going. These playful poems that treat the topic of death
may be contrasted with Milton’s lamentations, such as his funeral tributes,
“Elegia secunda” (Elegy II) and “Elegia tertia” (Elegy III), and the later
renowned pastoral elegies: “Lycidas,” which memorializes Edward King, and
“Epitaphium Damonis” (Damon’s Epitaph), which mourns the loss of Charles
Diodati.”
Probably
in 1631, toward the end of his stay at Cambridge, Milton composed “L’Allegro“
and “Il Penseroso,” companion poems. They may have been intended as poetic
versions or parodies of the prolusions, the academic exercises at Cambridge
that sometimes involved oppositional thinking. Clearcut examples include
Milton’s Prolusion I (“Whether Day or Night Is the More Excellent”) and Prolusion
VII (“Learning Makes Men Happier than Does Ignorance”). The correspondences and
contrasts between “L’Allegro” and “Il Penseroso”—in themes, images, structures,
and even sounds—are innumerable. Essentially, Milton compares and contrasts two
impulses in human nature: the active and contemplative, the social and
solitary, the mirthful and melancholic, the cheerful and meditative, the erotic
and Platonic. Some commentators have identified Milton with the personality
type of “Il Penseroso” and Diodati with that of “L’Allegro.” Though the poems
anatomize each personality type and corresponding life-style apart from the
other, the overall effect may be to foster the outlook that a binary unit,
which achieves a wholesome interaction of opposites, is to be preferred. While
it is difficult to assess the autobiographical significance of the companion
poems or to develop a serious outlook when Milton himself may have composed
them playfully, “L’Allegro” and “Il Penseroso” graphically demonstrate the
dialectic that distinguishes much of Milton’s poetry, particularly the
dialogues and debates between different characters in various works, including
the Lady and Comus in Comus, the younger and elder brothers in the same work,
Satan and Abdiel in Paradise Lost, Adam and Eve, Samson and his visitors, and
the Christ and the tempter in the wilderness of Paradise Regained (1671).”
Having
spent seven years at Cambridge, Milton entered into studious leisure at his
parents’ home in Hammersmith (1632-1635) and then at Horton (1635-1638).
Perhaps he was caring for his parents in their old age because his sister and
brother were unable to do so. Anne had become a widow in 1631 and had two young
children. Probably in 1632 she married Thomas Agar, a widower who had one young
child. Milton’s younger brother, Christopher, was a student at Christ’s
College. The situation with his parents may explain why Milton , after
Cambridge, did not accept or seek a preferment in the church. Although he may
still have intended to become a minister, it seems likely that the prevailing
influence of William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, who established and
enforced ecclesiastical and religious regulations, deeply affected Milton’s
outlook. The most concise but cryptic explanation for his eventual rejection of
the ministry as a career is provided by Milton himself, who in one of his prose
treatises, The Reason of Church-governement (1642), comments that he was
“church-outed.” An undated letter to an unidentified friend, a document
surviving in manuscript in the Trinity College Library at Cambridge, sheds
further light on Milton’s view of the ministry as a career. Some commentators
speculate that Thomas Young is the addressee. Another influential factor in
Milton’s decision may have been his long-standing inclination to become a poet,
evident in poems written in his Cambridge years and published in the 1645
edition. One of the most self-conscious, though ambiguous, statements
concerning Milton’s sense of vocation is Sonnet VII (“How soon hath time”).
Unfortunately, it cannot be accurately dated, though 1631-1632 seems likely. In
the poem he refers to the rapid passing of time toward his “three and twentieth
year.” His “hastening days fly on with full career,” though the direction of
movement, toward the ministry or poetry, goes unidentified. In any case, he
contends that his process of development toward “inward ripeness” continues
under the all-seeing eye of Providence.”
Milton’s
course of study in his leisure is outlined in Prolusion VII, which was
influenced by Francis Bacon’s Advancement of Learning (1605). History, poetry,
and philosophy (which included natural science) are celebrated as important to
individual growth and to civic service. Milton’s Of Education (1644), an
eight-page pamphlet written in the early 1640s, elaborates on many of the ideas
in Prolusion VII and cites specific authors to be read. Autobiographical
statements in various forms emerge from Milton’s period of private study, which
enabled him to supplement extensively his education at Cambridge and to read
numerous authors of different eras and various cultures. In a 23 November 1637
letter to Charles Diodati, Milton indicated the progress of his study,
particularly in the field of classical and medieval history, involving the
Greeks, Italians, Franks, and Germans. At this time, moreover, Milton kept two
important records of his reading and writing. The “Trinity Manuscript” or
“Cambridge Manuscript,” so called because it is kept in the Library of Trinity
College, Cambridge, includes works such as “Arcades,” Comus, the English odes,
“Lycidas,” “At a Solemn Music,” and other later, but short, poems. Also in the
manuscript are sketchy plans and brief outlines of dramas, some of which were
eventually transformed and assimilated to Paradise Lost. For some of the poems,
the “Trinity Manuscript” includes various drafts and states of revision. The
second record kept during this period is the commonplace book (now in the
British Library), which lists topics under the threefold Aristotelian framework
of ethics, economics, and political life, topics that aroused Milton’s interest
and that were later incorporated into his prose works. The entries include
direct quotations or summaries, with sources cited, so that one learns not
simply what books Milton read but also what editions he used.”
Two
important works that Milton wrote during the years of studious leisure include
A Maske Presented at Ludlow Castle and “Lycidas.” The masque was first
performed on 29 September 1634, as a formal entertainment to celebrate the
installation of John Egerton, Earl of Bridgewater, as lord president of Wales.
The performance was held in the Great Hall of Ludlow Castle in Shropshire,
close to the border of Wales. The composer of the music was Lawes, also the
music tutor of the Egerton children. The three children—Alice (fifteen), John
(eleven), and Thomas (nine)—enacted the parts of the Lady, the elder brother,
and the younger brother. Lawes himself was the Attendant Spirit, named Thyrsis.
Other characters include Comus, a tempter, by whose name the masque has been
more commonly known, at least since the eighteenth century, and Sabrina, a
nymph of the Severn River. Because the earl of Bridgewater had taken up his
viceregal position without his family having accompanied him, a reunion was
planned. To honor the earl of Bridgewater and to use the occasion of family
reunion so that his children could act, sing, and dance under his approving eye
are other purposes of the masque.”
While
Comus may be examined in relation to masques of the same era, most notably the
collaborations of Jonson and Inigo Jones, the remoteness of Ludlow prevented
Milton and Lawes from mounting the sort of spectacle with elaborate scenery,
complicated machinery, and astounding special effects that Jones and Jonson
produced. Nor were trained dancers and singers transported from London.
Nevertheless, Comus does have scenery, chiefly for its allegorical
significance; singing, especially by individuals, such as the Lady, Sabrina,
and Thyrsis; and dancing, both the riotous antimasque of Comus and his revelers
and the concluding song and dance of triumph featuring the three children and
others referred to as “Country-Dancers,” all under the direction of Lawes in
his role as the Attendant Spirit. The three major settings of the masque are
the “wild Wood” at the outset, actually a location indoors decorated with some
foliage (more imaginatively depicted by vivid language); the palace of Comus,
in which the tables are “spread with all dainties”; and the outdoors, near the
lord president’s castle and within view of the town of Ludlow. These elements
of spectacle are incorporated into a plot severely limited by the circumstances
of the celebration and by the fact that only six notable players, three of them
children of the earl of Bridgewater, participated.”
Within
these limitations Milton wrote a masque—actually, it is more a dramatic
entertainment—that develops the theme of temperance and its manifestation in
chastity. The theme evolves against the three major settings and by reference
to the character of the Lady. From the outset of the masque, the Lady is
separated from her two brothers in the “wild Wood,” which suggests the mazes
and snares that confuse and entrap unwary humankind. Allegorically, the
topography signifies the vulnerability of humankind to misdirection, the result
of having pursued intemperate appetites rather than the dictates of right
reason, or the consequence of having been deceived by an evil character who
professes “friendly ends,” the phrase used by Comus in his plans to entrap the
Lady. Misled by Comus, who appears to be a “gentle Shepherd” and innocent
villager, the Lady travels to his “stately Palace set out with all manner of
deliciousness,” where she, while “set in an enchanted chair,” resists the offer
to drink from the tempter’s cup. Thereafter, she sits “in stony fetters fixed
and motionless” though continuing to denounce the tempter and his
blandishments. Despite her immobility, she affirms the “freedom of my mind.”
Her brothers “rush in with Swords drawn,” so that Comus is put to flight; and
Sabrina, “a Virgin pure” and “Goddess” of the Severn River, sprinkles drops of
water on the breast of the Lady to undo the spell of the enchanter. When
liberated, the Lady and her brothers “triumph in victorious dance / Over
sensual folly and Intemperance.”
The
suspense, adventure, and dramatic rescue enhance the conflict between the
tempter and his prospective victim. Typically, Milton uses classical analogues
to cast light on the situation. The Lady is likened to the goddess of chastity,
Diana, who frowned at suggestions of lasciviousness and whose role as huntress
made her a formidable adversary, one whose virtue was militant, not passive.
The Lady is also likened to Minerva, the goddess of wisdom, on whose shield is
pictured one of the Gorgons, whose look would turn one to stone. By analogy,
the Lady’s disapproving glance casts dread into lustful men. The classical
analogues of the enchanter are best explained by his parentage, Bacchus and
Circe. His father is the god of wine and revelry; his mother is the sorceress
who turned Ulysses’ mariners into swine when they imbibed the drink that she
proffered. In fact, the journey of Ulysses and the temptations encountered by
him and his men provide a context in which to understand the travel of the Lady
through adversity, her endeavor to withstand temptation, and the reunion that
she anticipates.”
These
classical analogues and others like them call attention to a moral philosophy
that contrasts the lower and higher natures of humankind. Degradation or
sublimation, respective inclinations toward vice or virtue, are the opposite
impulses adumbrated in the masque. Accordingly, Comus’s followers, having
yielded to the vice of intemperance, are degraded so that they appear “headed
like sundry sorts of wild Beasts.” They were imbruted when, “through fond
intemperate thirst,” they drank from Comus’s cup. Their “foul disfigurement” is
a defacement of the “express resemblance of the gods” in the human countenance.
With his charming rod in the one hand and the glass containing the drink in the
other, Comus is indeed akin to his mother, Circe. Like her, he has attracted a
rout of followers, whose antimasque revelry, both in song and dance, suggests a
Bacchanal, the sensualistic frenzy associated with his father. Before, during,
and after her encounter with Comus, the Lady has a “virtuous mind,” and she is
accompanied by “a strong siding champion Conscience,” enabling her to see
“pure-eyed Faith,” “white-handed Hope,” and the “unblemished form of Chastity.”
In this series of three virtues chastity is substituted for charity, which
typically appears along with faith and hope. Milton therefore suggests that
chastity and charity are interrelated. Chastity is a form of self-love, not vanity
but a wholesome sense of self-worth that enables one to value the spirit over
the flesh and to affirm the primacy of one’s higher nature. When viewed from
this perspective, chastity is the necessary prerequisite to one’s love of God,
not to mention one’s neighbor.”
The
moral philosophy of Comus reflects the imprint of Neoplatonism. In the
Renaissance, particularly between 1450 and 1600, the works of Plato were
reinterpreted and the central ideas emphasized. Beginning in Italy at the
Platonic Academy of Florence, Renaissance Neoplatonism eventually spread
throughout the Continent and entered the intellectual climate of England. The
Renaissance version of Platonism synthesized the ideas of Plato and Plotinus
with elements of ancient mysticism, all of which were assimilated, in turn, to
Christianity. The fundamental tenet of Renaissance Neoplatonism asserted by
Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499), one of the foremost intellectuals of the
Florentine Academy, is that “the soul is always miserable in its mortal body.”
The soul, having descended from the realm of light, strives to return homeward.
While on earth, the soul is immersed in the darkness of the human condition and
imprisoned in the human body. In effect, the soul and the body are in a state
of tension, the one thriving at the other’s expense. When the appetites are
denied virtue prevails, and the soul is enriched. When, on the other hand, the
appetites of the flesh are indulged, vice predominates, and the soul suffers.
The term psychomachia, which means “soul struggle,” designates the inner
conflict that one experiences as virtue and vice contend for dominance. The
foregoing paradigm is typical of certain Renaissance paintings of the fifteenth
and sixteenth centuries. Several works of Perugino and Andrea Mantegna, having
been influenced by Neoplatonic philosophy, depict the contention between ratio
and libido, or reason and desire. These paintings show classical gods and
goddesses whose allegorical significance was established. Venus and Cupid
embody desire and its attendant vices; Diana and Minerva, to whom the Lady of
Comus is likened, signify reason and its accompanying virtues.”
Another
tradition that may have contributed to Comus is the morality drama of the late
Middle Ages, which uses allegorical characters to present the conflict between
the virtues and vices. Furthermore, Edmund Spenser’s allegorical treatment of
temperance and chastity in The Faerie Queene (1590, 1596) is pertinent to an
understanding of Milton’s work. After all, Milton in Areopagitica refers to the
“sage and serious poet Spenser,” whom he calls “a better teacher than Scotus
and Aquinas, describing true temperance under the person of Guyon.” Much as Sir
Guyon’s temperance in book 2 of Spenser’s epic anticipates the Lady’s virtue in
Comus, so too Britomart, the female knight in book 3, by her chastity
foreshadows the Lady’s heroism. While the depiction of the natural setting in
Comus, such as the maze of woods in which the Lady is lost, resembles at times
the topography in The Faerie Queene, both English and Continental pastoral
dramas of the Renaissance also provide analogues, including John Fletcher‘s
Faithful Shepherdess (1610) and Torquato Tasso’s Aminta (1573).”
Within
the dynamic conflict between virtues and vices, the role of reason,
particularly in maintaining one’s inner liberty, is crucial. If right reason,
or recta ratio, enables one to see the light of virtue, then the Lady has a
rational and imaginative vision of the Platonic ideals of faith, hope, and
chastity, for which she is the earthly embodiment. But when reason is misled by
the appetites, it is no longer effective. Upstart appetites gain control of a
person in whom the legitimate predominance of reason has been subverted. Such a
person in whom right reason no longer functions is enslaved by vice. Inward
servitude having been permitted, enslavement by an external captor becomes a
sign of one’s loss of self-government. The congruence of inner and outer
thralldom is emphasized by Milton in various works, ranging from The Tenure of
Kings and Magistrates (1649), an antimonarchical tract in which he argues that
“bad men” are “all naturally servile,” to Paradise Lost, where in book 12 the
archangel Michael explains to Adam that Nimrod has tyrannized others under the
sufferance of God, who permits “outward freedom” to be enthralled as a sign and
consequence that one is enslaved by “inordinate desires” and “upstart
Passions,” which create a condition of effeminacy. Thus, Neoplatonism may be
combined with moral philosophy and Christian theology in order to contrast the
rational or virtuous freedom of the Lady in Comus with the enslaved state of
the enchanter’s followers. Renaissance faculty psychology is also involved
because it highlights the interaction of sensory perception, the appetites or
passions, reason, and the will.”
Milton
himself may be used as a commentator on the contest between virtue and vice in
Comus. His private exposition of Christian theology, De Doctrina Christiana
(The Christian Doctrine), which was discovered in the nineteenth century and
published in 1825, includes a section in which he defines and classifies
virtues and vices, then cites scriptural passages, called proof-texts, to
substantiate his views. Temperance is “the virtue which prescribes bounds to
the desire of bodily gratification.” Under it are “comprehended sobriety and
chastity, modesty and decency.” Chastity “consists in temperance as regards the
unlawful lusts of the flesh.” Opposed to chastity is effeminacy, which licenses
the appetites and promotes sensual indulgence. De Doctrina Christiana may also
be used to distinguish the two kinds of temptation at work in Comus: evil and
good. In De Doctrina Christiana Milton explains that a temptation is evil “in
respect of him who is tempted.” Having yielded to temptation, one suffers the
evil effects, enslavement to upstart passions and at times external thralldom,
precisely what befall the enchanter’s victims in Comus. A good temptation, on
the other hand, is directed at the righteous “for the purpose of exercising or
manifesting their faith or patience,” a definition that aptly pertains to the
Lady in Comus. Biblical examples, particularly Abraham and Job, are cited in De
Doctrina Christiana. The results of good temptation are described as “happy
issue,” an assertion supported by a biblical proof-text, James 1:12: “Blessed
is the man that endureth temptation; for when he is tried, he shall receive the
crown of life.” In Comus, phrases such as “happy trial” and “crown of deathless
praise” are succinct references to the good temptation undergone by the Lady
and the heavenly reward for her Christian heroism.”
When
the rich and diverse contexts surrounding Comus are thus recognized, Milton’s
composition becomes more meaningful. Seemingly minor details, including
references to birds, fit into the overall design. Snares are mentioned, such as
“lime-twigs,” which result from the application of a glutinous substance that
prevents a bird from flying away. A bird thus trapped signifies a foolish
person enslaved to his or her passions. The virtuous Lady, on the other hand,
is described by her elder brother in another way: “She plumes her feathers, and
lets grow her wings.” Her freedom to elude Comus’s temptations is signified by
her readiness to fly. Flight also connotes her sublimated and rarefied ascent
from the human condition. Other verbal images are auditory but at times may
involve actual music. Comus and his followers when performing the antimasque
revelry create “barbarous dissonance,” whereas verbal imagery suggests that the
Lady’s “Saintly chastity” causes “Angels” to communicate with her: “in clear
dream and solemn vision” she learns “of things that no gross ear can hear.”
The
characterization of the Lady as an exemplar of temperance and chastity and the
definition of her Christian heroism acquire focus in two debates, one between
the two brothers, the other between the Lady and Comus. The younger brother
stresses the pathos of his sister’s situation: she is helplessly and hopelessly
lost in the woods and vulnerable to threats from beasts and mankind alike. The
elder brother counters his younger brother’s anxieties, arguing that their
“sister is not defenceless left” but armed with “a hidden strength,” chastity.
In his unfolding exposition of the strength afforded by chastity, the elder
brother alludes to Neoplatonism, moral philosophy, Christian theology, faculty
psychology, and the other contexts in which the Lady’s defense against the
wiles of Comus is more clearly understood.”
In
the Lady’s debate with the enchanter the theoretical exposition of the elder
brother is translated into action. The debate, reminiscent of Milton’s
prolusions at Cambridge, pits the sophistry of Comus against the Lady’s
enlightened reasoning, which is informed by her commitment to virtue,
specifically temperance and chastity. Comus’s palace, with “all manner of
deliciousness” and “Tables spread with all dainties,” is intended to arouse the
Lady’s appetites. The intricacies of the debate are manifold, but the essence
of Comus’s argument is simply stated: that appetites are naturally licit and
innocent when gratified. Having exhibited “all the pleasures” in his palace,
Comus alleges that such plenitude or bounty was provided by Nature for the use
and consumption of humankind—in particular, to “sate the curious taste.” The
Lady, on the other hand, perceives that overindulgence or even exquisite
indulgence is unnatural. To pursue one’s appetites without rational
self-control is to degrade human nature. Such rebuttal is accompanied by the
Lady’s external rejection of the “treasonous offer” of the cup, which signifies
licensed passions that would overthrow the predominance of reason. As the
debate intensifies, Comus resorts to a form of sophistry in which he reasons by
analogy, likening the Lady’s beauty to a coin or comparing her to a “neglected
rose.” Much as coins are to be used, so also the Lady’s beauty should be put
into circulation. A rose is to be admired, and the Lady likewise is to be
appreciated. A corollary of Comus’s argument is that the Lady’s beauty,
comparable to a rose, is ephemeral, an allusion to a prevalent theme—”carpe
diem,” or seize the day—in seventeenth-century poetry. Comus strives to
engender a sense of urgency in the Lady so that she will respond affirmatively
and immediately to his overture.”
While
Comus’s sophistical arguments and the Lady’s compelling counterarguments are
more subtle than the foregoing account suggests, the upshot is that the Lady’s
virtue, right reason, and wariness enable her to affirm her “well-governed and
wise appetite” while she refutes and debunks the “false rules pranked in
reason’s garb” and “dear Wit and gay Rhetoric” of her would-be seducer. The
Lady’s “freedom” of mind is manifested while she is physically restrained in
the enchanted seat, where she remains immobilized even after her brothers enter
with drawn swords to disperse Comus and his followers. When Sabrina, the nymph
who is invoked by the Attendant Spirit, emerges from the Severn River and
sprinkles drops on the breast of the Lady, the Attendant Spirit’s
comment—”Heaven lends us grace”—interprets Sabrina’s presence and gesture as
divine assistance, which may be explained theologically. In De Doctrina
Christiana Milton comments that natural virtue is elevated to supernatural
status only with an infusion of grace from above. Such, indeed, may be the case
with the Lady, whose heroism is rewarded by divine approval and whose joyous
reunion with her father at the end of the masque anticipates the relationship
of the sanctified soul and the Lord in the heavenly hereafter.”
In
Areopagitica Milton comments that he “cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered
virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her
adversary.” Rather, he extols virtue that has undergone “trial ... by what is
contrary,” then triumphed. In line with this view, Comus, a theatrical
presentation in the Marches or border region between England and Wales, may
advance the Lady as an exemplar of the virtue and moral rectitude, not to
mention civility, that the lord president seeks to establish in his
jurisdiction. As the seat of both the council and the court of the Marches,
Ludlow Castle was the central location from which administrative and judicial
policy and decisions were issued. Accordingly, the corruptions among the people
in the border region—drunkenness, gambling, sexual immorality, witchcraft, and
occultism—may suggest the sociopolitical context in which Milton’s masque was
composed and the relation of the work to the local populace.”
Despite
the early date of composition, Comus is a sophisticated foreshadowing of
Milton’s later poetry. The contention between virtue and vice is reenacted in
“Lycidas,” Paradise Lost, Samson Agonistes, and Paradise Regained. Though each
poem presents the archetypal conflict somewhat differently, long expositions
and debates, or certainly meditations, are crucial in all the works, especially
the later ones.”
The
second important work written during Milton’s studious leisure is “Lycidas,” a
pastoral elegy commemorating Edward King, a fellow student of Milton’s at
Christ’s College, Cambridge, who died on 10 August 1637 when a vessel on which
he was traveling capsized in the Irish Sea. King, like Milton , was a poet who
intended to enter the ministry. Milton’s poem was included in a collection of
thirty-five obsequies, Justa Edouardo King (1638), mostly in Latin but some in
Greek and English. Justa refers to justments or the due ceremonies and rites
for the dead. By writing a pastoral elegy that is heavily allegorical, Milton taps
into an inveterate tradition of lament, one that dates back at least to the
third century B.C., when poets in Greek Sicily, like Theocritus, Bion, and
Moschus, presumably initiated the genre. From the pre-Christian era through the
Renaissance in Italy, France, and England, pastoral elegies were written by
notable authors, including Virgil, Petrarch, Mantuan, Baldassare Castiglione,
Pierre de Ronsard, and Spenser. Of the works by these poets, the fifth and
tenth eclogues of Virgil’s Bucolics and Spenser’s Shepheardes Calender (1579)
were exceptionally influential. As the literary tradition of the pastoral elegy
unfolded, certain conventions were established, creating a sense of
artificiality that amuses or antagonizes, rather than edifies, some readers, including
Samuel Johnson in the eighteenth century. Some of the major conventions include
the lament by a shepherd for the death of a fellow shepherd, the invocation of
the muse, a procession of mourners, flower symbolism, satire against certain
abuses or corruptions in society and its institutions, a statement of belief in
immortality, and the attribution of human emotions to Nature, which, in effect,
also mourns the loss of the shepherd.”
Through
the use of such conventions Milton recounts his association with Edward King at
Cambridge, likening himself and his friend to fellow shepherds together from
early morning, through the afternoon, and into nightfall. Because of their
friendship Milton , through the narrator, expresses an urgency, if not
compulsion, to memorialize his friend. As a simple shepherd, he will fashion a
garland of foliage and flowers to be placed at the site of burial.
Allegorically, the garland signifies the flowers of rhetoric woven together
into a pastoral elegy. The narrator also expresses modesty and humility
concerning his talent to memorialize his friend: “with forced fingers rude” he
may “shatter” the leaves of the foliage that he strives to fashion into a
garland. The allegorical significance relates to the daunting challenge of crafting
a pastoral elegy. The three kinds of foliage cited by the narrator—laurels,
myrtles, and ivy—are evergreens, which symbolically affirm life after death. At
the same time they are associated with different mythological divinities. The
laurel crown of poetry was awarded by Apollo; the love of Venus was reflected
in the myrtle; and Bacchus wore a garland of ivy. Signified thereby is the
poetry written at Cambridge by King and Milton in imitation of classical Greek
and Latin literature. Later in “Lycidas,” when the narrator mentions the “oaten
flute” and its “glad sound,” to which “rough satyrs danced” while accompanied
by “fauns with cloven heel,” he is alluding to the erotic and festive poetry,
perhaps Ovidian, that King and Milton composed as students under the
supervision of a tutor at Cambridge.”
Despite
the conventions that Milton assimilates to his poem and the artificiality of
his pose as a naive shepherd, “Lycidas” is still an outlet for earnest
sentiment. The poem is Milton’s endeavor to write a pastoral elegy in order to
test his talent, to manifest his proficiency in a genre associated with the
most reputable poets, and to signal his readiness to progress to other
challenges. But King, who died before he fulfilled his potential as a poet and
priest, no doubt reminds Milton of his own mortality. By implication in
“Lycidas” and explicitly in other poems, Milton registered concern that his
unfolding career as a poet might be interrupted not only by early death but by
the failure to progress in his development as a poet or because of failed
inspiration. Milton , in short, may be alluding to himself when he complains
that Lycidas, who equipped himself “to scorn delights, and live laborious
days,” died without having achieved the fame as a poet to which he aspired.
While the allusions recount King’s abstemiousness and strict regimen of study,
they glance, as well, at Milton’s similar habits. But lament turns to
bitterness, so that the narrator in the allegorical framework of the poem
impugns God’s justice: “the blind Fury with th’aborred shears” cuts “the thin
spun life.” Some critics suggest that Milton erred in his reference to the
Furies, whose keen sight—they are by no means “blind”—enables them to serve as
agents of divine vengeance. From this vantage point, Milton should have alluded
to the Fates—Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos—who spin the thread of life. In
particular, Atropos, whose name means “inflexible,” is equipped with shears to
cut the thread. The more likely explanation is that Milton conflates the Furies
and Fates into one allusion in order to heighten the narrator’s bitterness,
which emerges from his misperception that vengeance was misdirected and,
therefore, that justice is blind. The narrator’s bitterness is also aroused
because he associates the death of Lycidas with that of Orpheus, who was
dismembered by the Thracian women. The mythological figure’s remains scattered
on the Hebrus River and in the Aegean Sea suggest the route of King’s travel
from the River Deva to the Irish Sea.”
Appropriately,
Apollo, the classical patron of poetry who intervenes to rectify the
shortsightedness of the narrator, distinguishes “broad rumor” from “fame.”
Although Lycidas did not achieve earthly renown through “broad rumor,” he was
elevated much earlier into the hereafter, where an eternal reward, “fame,” will
be conferred on him under the eyes of the godhead. Apollo’s speech, which some
critics perceive as a digression, is integral to the poem because it affirms
that the godhead is both clear-sighted and just.”
Balancing
Apollo’s commentary on the role and reward of the poet is Saint Peter’s
perspective on the priesthood. For Milton, King was the ideal clergyman, whose
pastoral ministry would have been exemplary. King’s premature death at first
appears to be another example of injustice, for the corrupt clergymen and
bishops of the Church of England continue to prosper. Against the clergy and
most notably the bishops, Milton issues a virtual diatribe, a poetic
counterpart of his enraged denunciation of them in the antiprelatical or
antiepiscopal tracts. The speaker of the diatribe is “the pilot of the Galilean
lake,” Saint Peter. As the principal Apostle, Saint Peter is perceived, in
effect, as the first bishop. As the one who wields the keys—”The golden opes, the
iron shuts amain,” images that signify, respectively, access to Heaven and
incarceration in Hell—Saint Peter functions as the sharp-sighted judge.
Inveighing against the bishops as “Blind Mouths!,” Saint Peter thus likens them
to tapeworms that infest the sheep. Later they are equated with infectious
diseases tainting the flock. Saint Peter’s stern tone anticipates his eventual
use of the “two-handed engine at the door,” an instrument of divine justice
that he wields in judgment against reprobates. His message, in sum, is that
corrupt clergy and bishops may thrive in the present life, but justice will be
exacted in the hereafter. In his prose treatises Milton uses the odious term
“hireling,” derived from the Gospel of John, to describe a venal clergyman. In
John’s Gospel the “hireling” is contrasted with the Good Shepherd, whose
faithful service would have been reembodied in King.”
Across
the panorama of the poem, the narrator undergoes a change in outlook. At first
sorrowful and depressed, he projects his mood onto the landscape. The flowers
that he enumerates in a virtual catalogue manifest the human emotion of grief,
as well as the ritualistic appearance and gestures of mourning—”Cowslips ...
hang the pensive head”; “every flower ... sad embroidery wears”; and
“Daffadillies fill their cups with tears.” Later in the poem, when the narrator
comes to recognize that Lycidas has been elevated into the heavenly hereafter,
his outlook and tone change noticeably. Whereas Lycidas’s “drooping head” has
sunk into the waves, the narrator likens this downfall to the sunset, followed
by sunrise. Lycidas, like the sun, “tricks his beams” and “flames in the
forehead of the morning sky,” enhanced by the sheen of the water. Both fire and
water bring about baptismal cleansing so that Lycidas enters Heaven, where he
“hears the unexpressive nuptial song,” the intimate union of the sanctified
soul and the Lord celebrated in the Book of Revelation. Like the resurrected
Christ, Lycidas is finally triumphant and glorified. At the end of the poem
most of the biblical allusions that celebrate joy after sorrow are from
Revelation.”
Despite
its brevity (only 193 lines), “Lycidas“ anticipates a recurrent theme in
Milton’s major poems: the justification of God’s ways to humankind. In Paradise
Lost, for example, the downfall of Adam and Eve and the introduction of sin and
death into the human condition are interpreted from a providential perspective.
From this vantage point, the deity is not vengeful but merciful, not misguided
or blind but instrumental in humankind’s ultimate triumph. In Samson Agonistes
(1671), the downfall of the protagonist results in bitterness toward God.
Samson, having been chosen by God to liberate the Israelites from the tyranny
of the Philistines, is himself enslaved. By the end of the dramatic poem Samson
and others who have impugned God’s justice come to recognize that the
“unsearchable dispose” or providential intent is very different from what they
had alleged.”
As
a capstone to his education at Cambridge and to the years of private study, the
twenty-nine-year-old Milton, with an attendant, traveled abroad for fifteen
months in 1638-1639, to France but chiefly through Italy. The principal source
of information about the grand tour is Milton’s Defensio Secunda. Despite his
vocal opposition to Roman Catholicism, while he was abroad Milton fraternized
with numerous Catholics, including Lucas Holstenius, the Vatican librarian;
presumably Cardinal Francesco Barberini; and Giovanni Battista Manso, the
patron of both Giambattista Marini and Tasso. In his poem “Mansus,” Milton ,
who recognizes the importance of patrons such as Manso, yearns for such
friendship and support in order to write a poem about King Arthur. Milton did
not compose an Arthuriad, probably because his concept of heroism was very
different by the time that he wrote Paradise Lost. In Italy, moreover, Milton
viewed numerous works of art that depicted biblical episodes central to his
later works—Paradise Lost, Samson Agonistes, and Paradise Regained. The relationship
of the works of art to the visual imagery in the major poems is the subject of
much critical commentary. During his stay in Florence, Milton visited the aged
and blind Galileo. Having suffered through the Inquisition, Galileo was under
virtual house arrest in his later years. In Paradise Lost Milton refers to
Galileo’s telescope and to the view of the heavens that it provided. As a
victim of persecution, Galileo became for Milton a symbol of the adversity that
a spokesperson of the truth underwent. Also in Florence, Milton read his
Italian poetry at the academies, where he elicited the plaudits of the
humanists for his command of their language. Milton corresponded with his
Florentine friends, such as Carlo Dati, after his return to England. Years
later, Milton continued to remember his friends at the Florentine academies
with intense affection. Before his departure from Italy he shipped home
numerous books, including musical compositions by Claudio Monteverdi. From
Venice, Milton headed to Geneva. In Italy or in Switzerland, he learned of the
deaths of his sister, Anne, and of Charles Diodati. To memorialize Diodati,
Milton wrote a pastoral elegy, “Epitaphium Damonis,” in Latin.
After
his return to England, Milton assisted in the education and upbringing of
Anne’s children, John and Edward Phillips. He also became embroiled in the
controversies against the Church of England and the growing absolutism of
Charles I. The freedom of conscience and civil liberty that he advocated in his
prose tracts were pursued at a personal level in the divorce tracts. Milton
married three times; none of the relationships ended in divorce. His first
wife, Mary Powell, left Milton shortly after their marriage in summer 1642 in
order to return to her parents. This separation evidently motivated the
composition of The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce (1643). By 1645 they were
reunited. Mary died in 1652. His second wife, Katherine Woodcock, whom he
married on 12 November 1656, died in 1658. Milton’s third wife, Elizabeth Minshull,
whom he married on 24 February 1663, survived him. In addition to his marital
woes Milton faced the deaths of his infant son, John, in 1651 and of an infant
daughter in 1658. In the same period Milton’s relationship with his three
daughters by Mary Powell—Anne, Mary, and Deborah, all of whom survived their
father—was troublesome, especially because they did not inherit their father’s
interest in and aptitude for learning. Further adversity resulted from his
failing eyesight and total blindness by 1652. These adversities, along with
Milton’s involvement in politics, may have delayed the composition of the major
poetry, and Paradise Lost, Samson Agonistes, and Paradise Regained surely bear
the imprint of Milton’s personal experience and public service.
Milton’s
major work, Paradise Lost , was first published in ten books in 1667, then
slightly revised and restructured as twelve books for the second edition in
1674, which also includes prose arguments or summaries at the outset of each
book. Paradise Lost, almost eleven thousand lines long, was initially conceived
as a drama to have been titled “Adam Unparadised,” but after further
deliberation Milton wrote a biblical epic that strives to “assert Eternal
Providence, / And justify the ways of God to men.” To vindicate Providence,
Milton attempts to make its workings understandable to humankind. In accordance
with epic conventions, he begins his work in medias res. An overview of major
characters and their involvement in the action are the prerequisites to further
critical analysis. In the first two books the aftermath of the War in Heaven is
viewed, with Satan and his defeated legions of angels having been cast down
into Hell, a place of incarceration where they are tormented by a tumultuous
lake of liquid fire. By the end of the first book they have been revived by
Satan, under whose leadership they regroup in order to pursue their war against
God either by force or guile. Most of the second book depicts the convocation
of the fallen angels in Hell. Rather than continue their warfare directly
against God and his loyal angels, they choose to reconnoiter on the earth, the
dwelling place of God’s newly created human beings, whose lesser nature would
make them more vulnerable to onslaught or subversion. Satan, who volunteers to
scout the earth and its inhabitants, departs through the gates of Hell, which
are guarded by two figures, Sin and Death. He travels through Chaos, alights on
the convex exterior of the universe, then descends through an opening therein to
travel to earth. While Satan is traveling, God the Father and the Son,
enthroned in Heaven at the outset of book 3, oversee the progress of their
adversary. Foreknowing that Adam and Eve will suffer downfall, the Father and
the Son discuss the conflicting claims of Justice and Mercy. The Son volunteers
to become incarnate, then to undergo the further humiliation of death in order
to satisfy divine justice. At the same time his self-sacrifice on behalf of
humankind is a consummate act of mercy, one by which his merits through
imputation will make salvation possible.
In
a soliloquy at the beginning of book 4, a vestige of the dramatic origin of the
epic, Satan, having arrived in the Garden of Eden, laments his downfall from
Heaven and his hypocritical role in instilling false hope in his followers,
whom he misleads into believing that they will ultimately triumph against God.
Satan’s first view of Eden and of Adam and Eve arouses his admiration, which is
rapidly replaced by his malice and hate for the creator and his creatures.
Overhearing the conversation of Adam and Eve, Satan learns that God has
forbidden them to partake of the fruit of a certain tree in the Garden of Eden.
By the end of book 4 Satan has entered the innermost bower of Adam and Eve
while they are asleep. In the shape of a toad at Eve’s ear, he influences her
dream. When detected by the good angels entrusted with the security of Eden,
Satan reacquires his angelic form, confronts Gabriel, but departs Eden. At the
outset of book 5 Eve recounts her dream to Adam. In the dream Satan, who
appears as a good angel, leads Eve to the interdicted tree, partakes of the
fruit, and invites her to do likewise. Adam counsels Eve that her conduct in
the dream is blameless because she was not alert or rational. He concludes his
admonition by urging Eve to avoid such conduct when she is awake. Also in book
5 God sends the angel Raphael to visit Adam and Eve, chiefly to forewarn them
that Satan is plotting their downfall. Midway through book 5, in response to a
question from Adam, Raphael gives an account of the events that led to the War
in Heaven.
Book
6 describes the war in detail as the rival armies of good and evil angels
clash. Personal combat between Satan and certain good angels, such as Michael,
is colorfully rendered, but a virtual stalemate between the armies is the
occasion for intervention by the godhead. God the Father empowers the Son to
drive the evil angels from Heaven. Mounting his chariot, the Son, armed with
thunderbolts, accelerates toward the evil angels and discharges his weaponry.
To avoid the onrushing chariot and the wrathful Son, the evil angels, in
effect, leap from the precipice of Heaven and plummet into Hell. Also in
response to a question from Adam, Raphael provides an account of the seven days
of Creation, highlighting the role of the Son, who is empowered by the Father
to perform the acts by which the cosmos comes into being, including the earth
and its various creatures, most notably humankind. This account takes up all of
book 7. In book 8 Adam recalls his first moments of consciousness after
creation, his meeting with Eve, and their marriage under God’s direction. Using
that account as a frame of reference, Raphael admonishes Adam to maintain a
relationship with Eve in which reason, not passion, prevails.
Book
9 dramatizes the downfall of Eve, then Adam. Working apart from Adam, Eve is
approached by Satan, who had inhabited the form of a serpent. Led by him to the
interdicted tree, Eve yields to the blandishments of the serpent and partakes
of the fruit, and the serpent rapidly departs. Eve, having rejoined Adam, gives
him some fruit. His emotional state affects his power of reasoning, so that he
eats the fruit. Book 10 begins with the Son having descended from Heaven to
judge Adam and Eve. Though they are expelled from Eden, his merciful judgment,
their contrition, and the onset of grace will eventually convert sinfulness to
regeneration. Satan, who retraces his earthward journey to return to Hell,
encounters Sin and Death, who had followed him. He urges them to travel to the
earth and to prey on humankind. For the last two books of the epic, Adam,
having been escorted to a mountaintop by the angel Michael, has a vision of the
future. Narrated by Michael, the vision presents biblical history of the Old
and New Testaments, with emphasis on the redemptive ministry of Jesus and the
availability of salvation to humankind. The vision concludes with a glimpse of
the general conflagration at Doomsday, the Final Judgment, and the separation
of the saved from the damned in the hereafter.
Milton’s
work differs significantly from the epic traditon of Greco-Roman antiquity, the
Middle Ages, and the Renaissance. Earlier epics developed ideas of heroism that
celebrate martial valor, intense passions such as wrath or revenge, and cunning
resourcefulness. If indeed such traits of epic heroism are retained by Milton ,
they tend to be embodied in Satan. In other words, Milton uses the epic form
simultaneously as a critique of an earlier tradition of heroism and as a means
of advancing a new idea of Christian heroism for which the crucial virtues are
faith, patience, and fortitude. Undoubtedly, this idea of heroism was
influenced by Milton’s personal experience with adversity and by his public
service as a polemicist and an opponent of Stuart absolutism and the episcopacy
of the Church of England. Under attack from his adversaries, Milton , from his
perspective, was the advocate of a righteous cause that failed. The triumph of
his adversaries, his solitude after the Restoration, and his struggle to
understand how and why, under the sufferance of Providence, evil seemingly
prevailed—and other questions—presumably impelled him to modify an earlier plan
to compose a British epic on Arthur. At the same time, however, one may
acknowledge that some traditional traits of epic heroism are embodied in
characters such as the Son. Surely wrath and martial effectiveness are
manifested in the War in Heaven, but Milton more emphatically affirms that the
greater triumph of the Son is his voluntary humiliation on behalf of humankind.
Accordingly, faith, patience, and fortitude are the crucial virtues to be
exercised by the Son in his redemptive ministry, which he has agreed to
undertake because of meekness, filial obedience, and boundless love for
humankind.
Heroism
is simply one of a series of epic conventions used but adapted by Milton .
Another is the invocation of the muse, who is not precisely identified—whether
the Holy Spirit or, more generally, the spirit of the godhead. At times, Milton
alludes to the classical muse of epic poetry, Urania. The intent, however, is
to identify her not as the source of inspiration but as a symbol or imperfect
type of the Hebraic-Christian muse through which the divine word was
communicated to prophets or embodied in Jesus for dissemination to humankind. A
third convention is intrusion by supernatural beings, action that takes place
throughout the epic—when, for example, the godhead sends Raphael to forewarn
Adam and Eve of the dangers of Satan or when the Son descends to Eden as the
judge of humankind after the fall. In Adam’s vision of the future, the Son’s
role as the Incarnate Christ and the unfolding of his redemptive ministry are
highlights. The descent into the underworld, a fourth epic convention, occurs
in Paradise Lost as early as book 1, which shows the punishment of the fallen
angels in Hell. A fifth convention is the interrelation of love and war. The
love of Adam and Eve before and after their expulsion from Eden is central to
the epic, but the self-sacrifice of the Son on behalf of fallen humankind is
the most magnanimous example of love. Warfare in Paradise Lost is sensational
when the good and evil angels clash and as the Son expels Satan and his
followers from Heaven; but the epic develops another form of struggle,
humankind’s experience of temptation after Satan conceals his malice behind
external friendliness and solicitude. Finally, the style of Paradise Lost,
including the extended similes and catalogues, is a sixth epic convention. In
book 1 Satan, who had plummeted from Heaven into Hell, is prone on the fiery
lake. Across several lines, the narrator compares Satan’s enormous size with
that of the Titans. Later in book 1, as the fallen angels file from the burning
lake, an epic catalogue is used to cite their names as false gods whose idols
were worshiped in infidel cultures, particularly in Asia Minor. Both the
similes and catalogues, when examined closely, provide insight into other, but
related, aspects of style, such as the Latinate diction and periodic sentence
structure, which when accommodated to blank verse create a majestic rhythm, a
sense of grandeur, and at times sublimity.
While
contributing to Milton’s grand design, each book in the epic has distinctive
features. The first book begins with an invocation, and three other
books—three, seven, and nine—have similar openings. In all four instances the
narrator invokes divine assistance or inspiration to begin or continue his epic
poem. Furthermore, the invocations enable the narrator periodically to
characterize himself, to announce his aspirations, and to assess his progress
in composing the epic. Thus, in the invocation of book 1, the narrator pleads
for inspiration comparable to what Moses experienced in his relationship with
the Lord. Topography is mentioned, including Horeb and Sinai, the mountains,
respectively, where God announced his presence to Moses and gave him the
Commandments, and Siloa’s brook, where Christ healed the blind man. By
implication the narrator interrelates Hebraic-Christian landscapes with the
haunts of the classical muses. With his vision thus illuminated, he hopes to
describe events of biblical history. At the same time, he invites comparison
with epic writers of classical antiquity; but his work, which treats the higher
truth of biblical history and interpretation, will supersede theirs.
After
the invocation to book 1, the narrator’s description of Hell incorporates
accounts of the volcanic fury of Mt. Aetna, where the leaders of the Titans,
Typhon and Briareos, were incarcerated when cast down by Jove’s thunderbolts.
Coupled with this analogue and others, including classical descriptions of
Hades, is Milton’s adaptation of details from Dante’s Inferno. When, for
example, the narrator describes how the fires of Hell inflict pain but do not
provide light, the allusion is to Dante. And the lines “Hope never comes / That
comes to all,” which describe the plight of the fallen angels, paraphrase the
inscription on the gate to Hell in the Inferno: “Abandon all hope, ye who enter
here.” In reviving the fallen angels, Satan, upright and with wings
outstretched over the fiery lake, resembles the dove brooding on the abyss
(book 1) or the Son (book 7) standing above Chaos to utter the words that
result in Creation. Satan also parodically resembles Moses, who led his
followers away from the threat of destruction. His speeches instill false hope
in the angels, who are gulled by his public posturing, but the narrator alerts
the reader to Satan’s duplicity. Privately the archfiend is in a state of
despair. By the end of book 1 the fallen angels assemble in a palace called
Pandemonium to deliberate on a course of action: to pursue the war against God
by force or guile. As this convocation begins, Satan is not only the ruler in
the underworld but its virtual deity.
Book
2 opens with Satan enthroned above the other angels. The first of the speakers
to address the topic of ongoing warfare with God is Moloch, the warrior angel
who urges his cohorts to ascend heavenward and to use black fire and thunder as
weaponry. Despite his call to action, he recognizes that force will not prevail
against God. To disrupt Heaven and to threaten its security, though not
military triumphs, are nevertheless vengeful. The second speaker, Belial,
debunks the argument of Moloch. Not to endure one’s lot in defeat is a sign of
cowardice rather than courage, Belial argues. Moreover, he says, the fiery
deluge is not as tumultuous as it was immediately after the expulsion of the
fallen angels from Heaven, thus suggesting that God’s ire is remitting. Under
these circumstances the fallen angels may become more acclimated to the
underworld. By diverting attention from the stated premise of ongoing war
against God and by urging the fallen angels to orient themselves toward their
present habitat, Belial lays the groundwork for the third speaker, Mammon, who
advocates the creation of a kingdom in Hell. To redirect the debate to its
fundamental premise of ongoing war, Beelzebub, Satan’s chief lieutenant, intervenes.
He mocks the fallen angels, particularly Belial and Mammon, by calling them
“Princes of Hell” to indicate where their attention and energies are presently
focused. At the same time he knows implicitly that if Moloch, the warrior
angel, despairs of military success, then no one will be eager to pursue open
war against God. Accordingly, he revives Satan’s earlier suggestion—that the
earth and its newly created inhabitants should be assessed and then overcome by
force or seduced by guile. After the hazards of travel to the newly created
world are described, the fallen angels become silent until Satan agrees to
undertake the mission. Seemingly voluntary, the decision is virtually
constrained. Recognizing that an antagonistic relationship with God is essential
to the pretense that the fallen angels are hopeful rivals, not vanquished foes,
Satan revives the possibility of victory on the middle ground of earth. Having
agreed to scout the earth, he emphasizes that he will travel alone. By
preventing others emboldened by his lead from accompanying him, he reserves the
glory for himself.
At
the gates of Hell, Satan accosts Death, a wraithlike figure who challenges him.
Nearby is Sin, a beautiful woman above the waist but a serpent below, tipped
with a deadly sting. Her transmogrification prefigures Satan’s own degradation.
As an allegorical figure, she synthesizes Homer’s Circe and Spenser’s Error. In
her appearance and interactions with Satan and Death, she dramatizes the
scriptural account that uses an image of monstrous birth to describe how Sin
and Death emerge from lustful urges, which include both pride and concupiscence
(James 1:15). Having recalled that she emerged from Satan’s forehead, an
allusion to the birth of Athena from the head of Zeus, Sin incestuously
consorts with the archfiend, a relationship that begets Death. What results is
an infernal trinity, in which the offspring, Death, even copulates with his
mother, Sin. The remainder of the book follows Satan’s journey through Chaos.
The
invocation of book 2, like that of book 1, is a petition by the narrator for
light or illumination, so that he may report events that occur in Heaven.
Having ascended from Hell, through Chaos, to the convex exterior of the
universe, the blind narrator likens himself to a bird, particularly the
nightingale, which sings in the midst of darkness. He mentions many of the same
topographic features—the mountains and waters associated with classical and
Hebraic-Christian inspiration—cited in the invocation of book 1. Building on
the earlier invocation, in which he courts comparison with earlier epic
authors, he acknowledges a desire for fame comparable to that of Homer and
Thamyris, a blind Thracian poet. Like the blind prophets of classical
antiquity, Tiresias and Phineus, the narrator affirms that his physical
affliction is offset by the gift of inward illumination. As he reports the
dialogue in Heaven, the narrator develops structural and thematic contrasts
between books 2 and 3, not to mention differences between Satan and the Son.
The infernal consult, which aimed to bring about the downfall of humankind, is
balanced against the celestial dialogue, which outlines the plan of redemption.
If Satan is impelled by capital sins, such as hate, envy, revenge, and
vainglory, then the opposite virtues are the Son’s meekness, obedience, love,
and humility. The interaction of Justice and Mercy is also a central topic of
the dialogue, which is interrupted by the Father’s question: Who among the
angels “will be mortal” to redeem humankind? The question and the silence that
ensues are contrasted structurally and thematically with book 2, when Satan,
amid the hushed fallen angels, agrees to risk the threats of Chaos to travel to
earth. As the Son volunteers to die on behalf of humankind the dialogue
resumes, with emphasis on the imputation of his merits and the theology of
atonement. In the meantime Satan, having traveled to the opening in the cosmos,
alongside the point at which the world is connected to Heaven by a golden
chain, descends. He flies first to the sun, where, by posing as a lesser angel,
he acquires directions from Uriel to earth, where he arrives at the top of
Mount Niphates in Eden.
Book
4 begins with a soliloquy by Satan, the speech that was to have opened the
drama “Adam Unparadised.” At this point the so-called heroic nature of Satan as
the archetypal rebel is offset by his candid awareness that downfall was caused
by his own ambition; that his repentance is prevented by vainglory, which
impelled him to boast to the fallen angels that they would overcome God; and
that reconciliation with God, if possible, would lead inevitably to another
downfall because of ambition. Satan thus becomes the prototype of the obdurate
sinner. As he takes on the shapes of various animals—a cormorant, other
predators, a toad, and finally a serpent—Satan’s degradation contrasts markedly
with his earlier vainglorious posturing. Satan observes the resemblance of Adam
and Eve to their maker, assesses the complementary relationship of male and
female, learns of the divine prohibition concerning the Tree of Knowledge, and
overhears Eve’s account of her creation, especially her attraction to her
self-image reflected from the surface of a pool of water. Led from her
reflected image by the voice of God, Eve encountered Adam, to whom she is wed.
From the first, she acknowledges her hierarchical relationship with Adam,
wherein “beauty is excelled by manly grace.” Appellations that she applies to
him, such as “Author” and “Disposer,” reaffirm the relationship, along with her
other assessments: “God is thy law, thou mine.” Satan, who becomes a toad at
Eve’s ear, influences her dream while she and Adam are asleep in their bower of
roses. He regains his shape as an angel when accosted by Gabriel and the other
attendants in Eden.
When
Eve at the outset of book 5 recounts her dream, it is evident that Satan has
appealed to her potential for vainglory, the narcissistic inclinations toward
self-love, which when magnified disproportionately would elevate her above Adam.
Thus, the appellations that the tempter applies to Eve during her
dream—”Angelic Eve” and “Goddess”—may engender in her the psychology of
self-love and pride, precisely what brought about Satan’s downfall. Much as
Satan challenged his hierarchical relationship with God, so too Eve is tempted
to question her subordination to Adam. Dividing Book 5 in half is the visit by
Raphael, who descends to earth at the behest of God to forewarn Adam and Eve of
the wiles of the tempter. In his account of hierarchy, which is a discourse on
the great chain of being, Raphael emphasizes how “by gradual scale sublimed”
humankind, through continuing obedience, will ascend heavenward. His discourse,
an apt commentary on Eve’s dream, particularly the temptation to disobedience,
prepares for the account of Satan’s rebelliousness, the occasion for the
emergence of Sin from the archfiend. The context for Satan’s rebellion is the
so-called begetting of the Son, which does not refer to his origin as such but
to his newly designated status as “Head” of the angels or to his first
appearance in the form and nature of an angel. The latter possibility is the
more likely because Satan’s hate and envy would emerge from his subordination
to a being like himself, at least in external appearance. Having summoned
numerous angels to a location in the northern region of Heaven, ostensibly to
celebrate the begetting of the Son, Satan argues that God’s action is an
affront to the dignity of the angels. One of the angels, Abdiel, refutes
Satan’s argument. He contends that the manifestation of the Son as an angel is
not a humiliation of the godhead but an exaltation of the angelic nature. Such
an argument anticipates the eventual Incarnation of the Son, who unites his
deific nature with the human nature. In both instances, with the Son having
manifested himself in lesser natures, the solicitude of the deity for angels
and humankind alike is paramount.
Approximately
one-third of the angels rally behind Satan, who leads them in the three-day War
in Heaven, the subject of book 6. Typical epic encounters include the personal
combat of Satan and Abdiel, then Satan and Michael, not to mention the
large-scale clashes of angels. On the dawn of the third day, a situation that
prefigures the glorification of Christ at the Resurrection, the Son as the
agent of the Father’s wrath speeds in his chariot toward the evil angels. His
onrush, accompanied by lightning and a whirlwind, suggests the chariot of
Ezekiel. Having described the wrathful godhead in the War in Heaven, Raphael
balances this terrifying example by presenting a picture of the benevolent and
bountiful deity in book 7. First, however, the narrator in the invocation
alludes to his work’s half-finished state, expressing anxiety that his
inspiration may be interrupted or that his personal safety is threatened.
Through the narrator, Milton perhaps alludes to his own situation at the
Restoration, his intercessors presumably having negotiated an agreement that
spared his life, so long as he observed certain conditions. After the
invocation, book 7 includes an account of Creation, which elaborates on the
catalogues of Genesis to highlight how the plenitude, continuity, and gradation
are manifestations of God’s benevolence. Most significant is the interactive
relationship of male and female principles in Nature—for example, the sun’s
rays against the earth—a model for the union of Adam and Eve.
Across
books 5-7, the begetting of the Son, Satan’s sinfulness, the War in Heaven, and
Creation are episodes that build toward a pointed commentary by Raphael on the
relationship of Adam and Eve. Adam, however, first gives an account of his
creation, the first moments of his consciousness, and his marriage to Eve.
Whereas Eve was led shortly after her creation by the voice, not by the visible
presence, of the Lord, Adam at his creation first experiences the warmth of
sunlight, falls asleep, and in a dream is led by a “shape Divine” toward the
summit of the Garden of Eden. When he awakens, he views among the trees his
“Guide” or “Presence Divine,” who speaks to Adam: “Whom thou sought’st, I am.”
This disclosure is comparable to what the Lord from the bush on Horeb uttered
to Moses. Adam’s recognition of “single imperfection” moves him to request a
helpmate, who is created from his side. At once in his relationship with Eve,
Adam experiences “passion” and “commotion strange,” which cause Raphael to warn
him not to abandon rational control. Discoursing on the hierarchy of reason and
passion, the distinction between love and lust, and the scale or ladder along
which humankind is to ascend heavenward, Raphael, by conflating Neoplatonic
philosophy and traditional Christian theology, amplifies the context in which
to understand obedience and disobedience.
The
invocation of book 9 recapitulates Milton’s earlier plans to write an epic on
“hitherto the only argument / Heroic deemed”: the exploits of “fabled knights,”
like Arthur. As an index of his departure from epic tradition, Milton , through
his narrator, argues that “the better fortitude / Of patience and heroic
martyrdom,” previously “Unsung,” will distinguish his work. After the
invocation the narrator describes how Satan, who enters as a serpent, utters a
soliloquy (“O foul descent!”) that laments his degradation, an outlook that
contrasts with the Son’s willingness to inhabit the nature and form of
humankind. Because he is implementing a strategy of deception, Satan conceals
his true nature behind a disguise; whereas the Son by becoming human intends to
reveal and implement the divine plan of salvation.
In
her first speech to Adam in book 9 Eve proposes that she and Adam “divide”
their “labors” because their mutual affection has diverted them from their
duties of gardening. Adam counters her proposal by affirming that he and Eve
when together are “More wise, more watchful, stronger.” Despite the cogency of
his argument, Adam twice urges Eve to “Go,” thereby forfeiting his
responsibility to issue a lawful command for Eve to remain with him, a command
that she would be free to obey or disobey. The topic of a lawful command recurs
at the end of book 9, when during their mutual recrimination Eve faults Adam:
“why didst not thou, the head, / Command me absolutely not to go ... ?”
Agreeing to reunite with Adam by noon, Eve works alone among the roses,
propping up the flowers with myrtle bands. Ironically, the very duty of
gardening that she performs should bring to mind her relationship with Adam,
from whom she is separated. Satan is pleased to have found her alone. Eve’s
beauty momentarily awes Satan, who is rendered “stupidly good,” a phrase
suggesting that he is disarmed of his enmity. In his approach to Eve the
serpent/tempter seeks to re-create in her the psychology of transcendence,
which he had engendered during her dream. Feigning submissiveness and awe
because of her beauty, Satan deceives Eve into believing that his power of
reasoning derives from the forbidden fruit. Characterizing God as a
“Threatener” and “Forbidder” who denies the fruit to others to prevent them
from becoming his equals, the serpent/tempter capitalizes on Eve’s unwariness,
influences her perception, and thus affects her will. Having engorged the
forbidden fruit, Eve for a time contemplates possible superiority over Adam;
but fearful that death may overtake her and that Adam would be “wedded to
another Eve,” she resolves to share the fruit with him. As he was awaiting the
return of Eve, Adam had fashioned a garland of roses. Astonished to learn at
their reunion that Eve violated the divine prohibition, he drops the wreath,
which withers. This dramatic event foreshadows the process of dying that will
be introduced into the human condition as a consequence of the downfall of Adam
and Eve. Whereas Eve was deceived by the tempter, Adam is “overcome with Female
charm,” a reaction whereby judgment gives way to passion, precisely the concern
that Raphael had expressed at the end of book 8. Not unlike the phantasmic
experience of Eve’s dream, Adam and Eve undergo illusory ascent, then sudden
decline. With the onset of concupiscence, moreover, their lustful relationship
contrasts with the previous expression of love in their innermost bower.
Besieged by turbulent passions, Adam and Eve become involved in mutual
recrimination, each faulting the other for their downfall, both denying culpability.
At
the outset of book 10 the Father sends the Son to earth as “the mild Judge and
Intercessor both,” as one who will temper justice with mercy. Despite the
retribution meted out to Adam and Eve, the greater emphasis of the Son’s
ministry is to encourage an awareness of sinfulness and the onset of sorrow and
contrition as steps in the process of regeneration. Satan, who has begun to
return to Hell, where with the fallen angels he plans to revel in his triumph
over humankind, meets Sin and Death, who traveled earthward in the wake of his
earlier journey. He urges them to prey on Adam and Eve and all their progeny.
Though Adam and Eve have continued their mutual recrimination, each eventually
acknowledges responsibility for sinfulness. Despite their evident frailties and
imperfections, Adam and Eve are neither victims nor victors. Having been
created “Sufficient to have stood, though free to fall,” they are endowed with
the capability to withstand temptation; but when they suffer downfall, they cannot
undergo regeneration without divine assistance. Their predicament, which
typifies the human condition, provides the context for the Christian heroism of
Milton’s epic. When measured in relation to humankind, heroism is manifested as
one resists temptation in the manner of the Lady of Comus or when one, having
yielded to temptation, experiences regeneration.
Books
11 and 12 include Adam’s dream vision of the future, which is narrated by the
angel Michael, who presents a panoramic overview of the implementation of the
divine will in human history. As Adam views Hebraic and Christian biblical
history, the prophets and patriarchs of the Old Testament, such as Noah,
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, and Joshua, are presented as “shadowy Types,”
prefiguring the Son’s incarnate ministry of redemption. Interspersed with
descriptions of the Old Testament types are accounts of evildoers, such as the
tyrant Nimrod. The cyclical interaction of goodness and evil, which continues
under the sufferance of Providence, is the context wherein obedience and
heroism are manifested, for which Christ is the perfect exemplar. Indeed, the
Pauline view that Jesus was obedient even unto death on the cross is the
Christian heroism at the center of Adam’s dream vision. In addition to its typological
emphasis, the vision of human history in books 11 and 12 is also apocalyptic,
with focus on the Second Coming, when the final victory over Satan will occur
and the union of sanctified souls with the godhead will take place in the
heavenly hereafter. More immediate for Adam and Eve, however, is their
expulsion from Eden and the change in their perception of Paradise—from an
external garden to “A paradise within,” which results from the indwelling of
the godhead in one’s heart.
Because
of its length, complexity, and consummate artistry, Paradise Lost is deemed
Milton’s magnum opus, the great work for which he had prepared himself since
youth and toward which, in his view, the godhead guided him. As a biblical
epic, Paradise Lost is an interpretation of Scripture: a selection of biblical
events, their design and integration according to dominant spiritual
themes—downfall and regeneration, the presentation of a Christ-centered view of
human history, a virtual dramatization of the phenomenon of temptation to
create psychological verisimilitude, and final affirmation about personal
triumph over adversity and ultimate victory over evil. Imprinted in the epic
are Milton’s personal and political circumstances: his blindness, on the one
hand, and the dissolution of the Protectorate, on the other. Thus, Milton may
have identified himself with intrepid spokespersons who advocated a righteous
cause despite the adversity confronting them. Such figures include Abdiel,
whose “testimony of Truth” is the single refutation of Satan and the fallen
angels in book 5, and Noah, the “one just man” who, while surrounded by
reprobates, continues to advocate the cause of goodness. Though evil may be
ascendant for a time, including the Stuart monarchy at the Restoration, goodness
in the cyclical panorama of history will have its spokesperson and, ultimately,
will prevail.
After
Paradise Lost Milton’s two major works are Paradise Regained and Samson
Agonistes, published in the same volume in 1671. As such, the works may be
perceived as complementary, if not companion, pieces on the topic of
temptation. The Christ of Paradise Regained successfully withstands the
temptations of Satan in the desert, whereas Samson, who yields to temptation
earlier in his career, undergoes the cycle of spiritual regeneration. Like the
Lady in Comus, the Christ of Paradise Regained heroically refutes his tempter.
Like Adam in Paradise Lost, Samson manifests his heroism in recovery after
downfall.
If
Paradise Lost treats “man’s disobedience,” then Paradise Regained presents
Christ, whose human nature is emphasized, as the example of consummate
obedience. The work, approximately one-fifth the length of Paradise Lost, is
divided into four books. In the first book, after the Holy Spirit is invoked,
Satan overhears the announcement by the Father, “the great proclaimer,” that
Christ is his “beloved Son.” At Satan’s command a convocation of the fallen
angels is held in “mid air,” after which the tempter travels earthward to use
his wiles in order to learn the identity of Christ. His fear is that Christ
fulfills the prophecy that “Woman’s seed” will inflict the “fatal wound” on
him. Christ enters the desert, where he cogitates on the Old Testament
prophecies of his coming, the earlier events of his life, and his role in the
divine plan of redemption. After Christ has been in the wilderness for forty
days, the tempter, disguised as an old man, accosts him. Urging him to convert
stones into bread so that the two of them can alleviate their hunger, Satan is
refuted by Christ, who acknowledges that he is being tempted to “distrust” God.
In book 2 the absence of Christ troubles especially his mother. Satan in the
meantime has convoked the fallen spirits in order to plan a more subtle
seduction, which will begin with a temptation of food, then proceed to an
appeal to one’s desire for “honor, glory, and popular praise.” Christ, who
experiences hunger, dreams of food; when he awakens, he beholds “A table richly
spread.” Rejecting the “guiles” of the tempter, Jesus also dismisses
materialism and worldly power, symbolized by the scepter: “who reigns within
himself, and rules / Passions, Desires, and Fears, is more a King.”
By
the third book Satan is focusing on fame and glory, but Christ rejects earthly
fame as false, decrying military heroes and extolling spiritual heroism. From a
high mountain Christ views ancient kingdoms, over which he could become the
ruler by commanding the numberless troops that he also sees. Christ remains
unmoved by “ostentation.” Continuing the temptation in book 4, Satan shows
Christ the Roman Empire, of which he could become the benevolent sovereign.
Jesus, however, notes that “grandeur and majestic show” are transitory, whereas
“there shall be no end” to his kingdom. Thereafter Satan presents him with a
view of the whole world, a temptation that Jesus rejects outright. Still
endeavoring to tempt Jesus with glory, Satan offers him the total learning of
Greek antiquity—art, philosophy, and eloquence. By such gifts he would be
equipped to rule the world. Christ dismisses Greek learning because his own
direct knowledge of the Lord is the higher truth. While Jesus sleeps, Satan
strives unsuccessfully to trouble him with dreams and a storm. The climax of
the work occurs when Satan, having brought Christ to the pinnacle of the temple
of Jerusalem, tells him to stand or to cast himself down so that angels will
rescue him. Christ’s rebuke causes the tempter to flee. Angels then minister to
Jesus, who by resisting temptation has begun the liberation of humankind from
the wiles of the devil to which Adam had succumbed.
Milton
follows the order of the temptations outlined in the Gospel of Luke, rather
than in Matthew. Despite the focus on the trial in the desert, Milton
interrelates this experience of the Son to earlier and later biblical history.
Thus, Christ meditates on the events of his childhood and youth but also
remembers Old Testament biblical prophecy that anticipates the coming of the
Messiah. Furthermore, God the Father announces his intention to “exercise”
Christ in the desert, where “he shall first lay down the rudiments / Of his
great warfare” in preparation for his conquest over “Sin and Death” at the
Crucifixion and Resurrection. At the same time the patience, faith, and
fortitude that Christ manifests in the desert perfect the previous exercise of
similar virtues by Old Testament precursors, notably Job, who is cited by
Christ in one of his refutations of Satan. From this perspective the Book of
Job is another biblical source of Milton’s so-called brief epic. Perhaps Milton
was also modeling the trials and triumphs of Jesus after Spenser’s account of
Sir Guyon in book 2 of The Faerie Queene, where a demonic figure tests the
knight with temptations of materialism, worldly power, and glory. Christs Victorie
and Triumph in Heaven and Earth (1610) by Giles Fletcher the Younger is another
model possibly adapted by Milton.
When
one considers the grand scale across which the action of Paradise Lost takes
place—in Hell, Chaos, Heaven, the Cosmos, and Earth—Paradise Regained seems
both limited and limiting in its outlook. When one recalls the grand events of
Paradise Lost—from the War in Heaven to the Creation—what occurs in Paradise
Regained appears to be static. Furthermore, the dramatic elements of Paradise
Lost, such as motives for action, suspense, and conflict, excite the reader and
encourage both intellectual and psychological responses. In Paradise Regained,
on the other hand, the tempter is doomed to failure from the start because
Christ does not heed the temptations at all but rejects them outright, with
little or no internal conflict. Probably Milton is depending on the contrast
between Christ’s wholesale dismissal of the temptations and the more engaged
response by the reader, who is perhaps allured by the attractiveness of earthly
glory. In his exercise of perfect obedience and of virtues such as faith,
patience, and fortitude, Christ is the exemplar after whom we model our own
conduct.
Though
Paradise Regained lacks the grand and spectacular events of Milton’s longer
epic, its purpose is vastly different. Milton’s plan is to provide a context
for philosophical meditation and debate by Christ, who, at the outset of his
public ministry, is being equipped for his role as the Savior. As such, Christ
meditates on the significance of the two natures, divine and human, united in
him. The drama of the brief epic derives in part from the tension in Christ
between these two natures and the questions that emerge therefrom—how divine
omniscience is balanced against human reasoning, why suffering is the prelude
to triumph, and when Providence should rectify the misperceptions of the
people, who expect the Messiah to be an earthly conqueror. While it is a
foregone conclusion that Satan will not succeed with his wiles, the meditations
of Christ and the debates with his adversary enable him to reconcile his two
natures, to develop his message to the people, and to prepare for public
service as a preacher and exemplar. Related to these perspectives is the
tension between the ongoing relationship of Christ with the other divine
persons and his disengagement from them after he becomes incarnate. Though the
Father and the Spirit manifest themselves at the baptism of the Son in order to
affirm his divinity in spite of his humanity, afterward the Son enters the
human condition as fully as possible to enact his role as the suffering
servant. This role, which becomes evident to him in the wilderness, culminates
with his death on the cross.
If
suffering, temptation, and heightened self-perception are characteristic of
Paradise Regained, they are equally significant in Samson Agonistes, a dramatic
poem not intended for stage performance. Using the Book of Judges as his chief
source, Milton refocuses the saga of Samson in order to emphasize regeneration
after downfall, rather than sensational feats of physical strength. Beginning
the work with Samson’s degradation as a prisoner in a common workhouse in Gaza,
Milton portrays a psychologically tormented character, confused about his downfall
and at times antagonistic toward the godhead. Throughout the work a chorus of
Danites from Samson’s tribe both observe his plight and speak with him. Three
successive visitors also converse with Samson: Manoa, his father; Dalila, his
wife; and Harapha, a Philistine giant. In the course of these three visits
Samson acquires gradual, not complete, understanding of himself and of his
relationship with the godhead. With the departure of Harapha, the change in
Samson is noticeable to the chorus, which praises his psychological resurgence
from a state of acute depression and his faith in the higher, though obscure,
workings of Providence. The poem concludes with Samson in the theater of Dagon,
collapsing its pillars of support so that the falling structure kills more of
his adversaries than he has slain cumulatively in the past. He himself is
killed in the process.
One
of the chief ironies of Milton’s rendition is that Samson, though physically
strong, is spiritually weak. After he becomes a captive of the Philistines, a
consequence and manifestation of his having yielded to temptation, he gradually
undergoes spiritual regeneration, which culminates in his renewed role as God’s
faithful champion against the Philistines. Within the framework of temptation
and regeneration Milton recasts the concept of heroism, debunking or at least
subordinating feats of strength to the heroism of spiritual readiness, the
state in which one awaits God’s call to service. In line with this outlook the
structure of the work and the developing characterization of Samson are
discernible. At the outset Samson is tormented by the irony of his captivity.
The would-be liberator is himself enslaved. He questions the prophecy to his
parents that they would beget an extraordinary son “Designed for great
exploits.” At first Samson laments the contrast between his former, seemingly
heroic, status and his present state of captivity and degradation. He and
others recall his past feats: slaying a lion, dislodging and transporting the
gates of Gaza, and slaughtering vast numbers of Philistines with only the
jawbone of an ass.
As
the poem progresses Samson’s self-knowledge increases, and he comes to realize
that “like a petty God” he “walked about admired of all,” until “swollen with
pride into the snare” he fell. This realization, as it gradually develops in
Samson, is crucial to his self-knowledge and to the understanding of his
relationship with God. Samson and others, such as the chorus and Manoa, have
questioned, indeed impugned, Providence, likening God’s justice to the wheel of
fortune, which is turned blindly. They allege that God, after having chosen
Samson to be his champion, inexplicably rejected him. Samson believes that he
is alienated from God. As the poem unfolds it first becomes evident to the
reader, rather than to the characters, that God had guided Samson into an
encounter with the woman of Timna in order to warn his champion of the dangers
of pride. In particular, Samson married the woman of Timna, a Philistine, who
cajoled him until he disclosed the secret of a riddle that he had posed to the
thirty groomsmen at his wedding. When he yields the secret of the riddle to
her, she divulges it to the groomsmen. Despite God’s plan to use this episode
as a warning, Samson continues to be blinded by pride so that he falls into the
snare of Dalila. Thus, his external blinding by the Philistines aptly signifies
Samson’s benighted spiritual state. In Milton’s poem, moreover, Dalila is not
simply a concubine, her role in Scripture, but Samson’s wife. This point
emphasizes the parallel between the woman of Timna and Dalila, though the
essential difference is that Samson violates divine prohibition when he reveals
the secret of his strength to Dalila. The marital relationship of Samson and
Dalila also enables Milton to suggest contrasts with the conjugal union of Adam
and Eve. Whereas Samson rejects Dalila, Adam and Eve pursue their regeneration
cooperatively.
After
his downfall, therefore, Samson must clarify his perception in order to begin
the process of regeneration. By recognizing that pride was the cause of his
downfall, Samson becomes contrite. In the course of his trials, which involve
both physical affliction and psychological torment, Samson exercises patience,
faith, and fortitude until he regains the state of spiritual readiness that
will enable him to serve as an instrument of God. Ironically, no one, not even
Samson, believes that he will again be called to service by God.
The
three visitors Manoa, Dalila, and Harapha function unwittingly—another source
of irony—to assist Samson in the process of regeneration. Paternal solicitude
impels Manoa to negotiate with the Philistines for his son’s liberation. If
their desire for revenge against Samson is satisfied, Manoa believes, the
Philistines may release his son. He does not recognize that enslavement by the
Philistines is simply a sign of Samson’s inward thralldom to sinful passions.
Nor does he recognize that God’s justice, rather than Philistine revenge, is to
be satisfied and that Samson’s suffering is both a means of divine retribution
and a source of wisdom. Dalila, who seeks by various arguments to elicit
Samson’s forgiveness and to persuade him to be reunited with her, is rejected
wholesale. In short, a measure of his progress is that Samson, who previously
yielded to Dalila, resists her wiles.
Of
all three visitors, Dalila is perhaps the most important because of past and
present relationships with Samson. In his earlier relationship with Dalila,
Samson recalls, he was “unwary” so that her “gins and toils” ensnared him. He
likens her to a “bosom snake,” suggesting that she had gained access to, and
influence over, his innermost being. Though it has been anticipated by the
woman of Timna, Samson calls Dalila’s betrayal of him both “Matrimonial treason”
and “wedlock-treachery.” To describe his present rejection of Dalila, Samson
resorts to classical allusions. He shuns her “fair enchanted cup” and remains
impervious to her “warbling charms,” thereby likening her to Circe and the
Sirens, respectively. In his encounter with Dalila, Samson for the first time
is gratified, rather than displeased, by the contrast between his past status
and his present self. Another way of perceiving Samson’s relationships with
Dalila is by reference to Milton’s De Doctrina Christiana. When Samson yielded
to Dalila, he experienced evil temptation; as he resists her, he exercises
virtue in the course of good temptation. Additionally, the rage that Dalila
elicits in Samson carries over to his encounter with Harapha, who expects to
see a crestfallen captive. Instead, Samson challenges the Philistine giant, who
retreats.
The
climax of the poem occurs when Samson, at first unwilling to attend the
activities at the theater of Dagon, the Philistine idol, is impelled by
“rousing motions” to go there. Initially, Samson feared that he would be
publicly humiliated when performing feats of strength to entertain the
Philistines; but his faith in the higher, though obscure, plan of Providence is
rewarded not simply by the impulsion to attend the Dagonalia but by the inner
light. “With inward eyes illuminated,” Samson, who becomes aware of the divine
will, exercises his volition in concert with it by collapsing the pillars that
support the theater of Dagon. Significantly, Samson’s death is described more
as a resurrection, whereby he is likened to the phoenix that emerges from the
conflagration at its funeral pyre. Finally, the fame that Samson achieves by
his renewed spiritual readiness and service as God’s agent transcends his
previous glory from feats of strength and slaughter of the Philistines. After
all, he is included among the heroes of faith celebrated in the Epistle to the
Hebrews.
Not
to be overlooked are the political dimensions of the poem, at times
counteracting the more traditional outlook on Samson. The saga of Samson may
allegorize the heroic ambitions and failings of the Puritan revolution, and his
demise, rather than a sign of heroism, may be the product of self-delusion.
Samson Agonistes may also emerge from Milton’s personal and political
circumstances—his blindness and his role during the rise and fall of a
political movement in Britain toward which providential intent was obscure.
If
Milton conceived of his dramatic poem after the manner of Greek tragedy, the
resemblance is clearcut. The unities of time, place, and action are observed.
The poem begins at dawn and ends at noon on the same day. The single place for
the action is the workhouse, where, after the destruction of the Philistines, a
messenger gives an account of the catastrophe. The action centers on Samson’s
spiritual regeneration, culminating in his heroism. Because of Samson’s death
and victory, the poem combines features of classical tragedy and Christian
drama of regeneration, for which the saga of Samson is a Hebraic prefiguration.
When Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes are juxtaposed in
their probable order of composition, the threefold arrangement, a virtual
triptych, depicts Old Testament types—Adam and Samson—yielding to temptation,
then undergoing regeneration; Christ’s triumph over the tempter is the New
Testament antitype at the center.
Milton’s
influence in later eras derives from his prose and his poetry. His treatises
against various forms of oppression and tyranny have elicited admiration in
many quarters and in different eras. In fact, his influence as a political
writer was felt in the American, French, and Russian revolutions, when he was
cited to justify the opposition to monarchs and absolutists. Among the English
Romantics, Milton was extolled as a libertarian and political revolutionary.
His refusal to compromise on matters of principle, his blindness, and his
punishment after the Restoration have caused many admirers to cite Milton as a
model of the spokesperson of truth and of someone who pursues idealism despite
adversity.
Milton’s
reputation as one of the finest English poets was widespread soon after his
death in 1674. While most of the critical attention was directed at Paradise
Lost, it is essential to realize that his other works drew extensive
commentary. In 1712 Joseph Addison devoted eighteen Spectator papers to
Paradise Lost—six general essays and twelve others, one on each book of the
epic. At times the outlook on Milton as a poet reflected the biases of the commentators.
In the eighteenth century, for example, Tories and Anglicans had little
admiration for him, but the Whigs were laudatory. Interestingly, Paradise Lost
was cited for its contributions to the teaching of traditional Christianity
because most interpreters were inattentive to possible implications in the epic
that the Son might be subordinate to the Father. Also at the center of
attention in the eighteenth century were the grandeur and sublimity of the
poem. By the nineteenth century the critical outlook shifted to technical and
stylistic features of the verse; but the Romantic admirers of the figure of
Satan in Paradise Lost, including William Blake and Percy Bysshe Shelley ,
implicitly attacked the traditional theological and philosophical ideas in the
work. Through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Milton’s reputation as a
poet becomes quite complex. For a time, in fact, Milton fell into disrepute
because of T. S. Eliot ‘s adverse comments decrying the artificiality of his
verse.