Cliff Notes - Paradise Lost.txt

(183 KB) Pobierz
JOHN MILTON: THE AUTHOR AND HIS TIMES

Americans tend to forget that they weren't the first to have a
revolution.  The English had theirs more than 130 years before the
Thirteen Colonies rebelled.  The English revolution consisted of a
bloody Civil War from 1642 to 1649, the beheading of King Charles I
in January 1649, and ten years of Puritan republican rule; it ended
finally with the restoration of the monarchy under King Charles II in
1660.

These events aren't merely the background to John Milton's life:
they were his life.  We usually think of the war as a conflict
between the Cavaliers and the Roundheads.  John Milton was a
Roundhead.  The Cavaliers, or Royalists, supported the king and
tended toward Catholicism.  They believed in an aristocracy that had
the right to special privileges, both in politics and in religion.
The Roundheads, or Puritans, believed in a wider distribution of
political and economic power and the right of every man to enjoy
direct access to God.

Milton was so strongly committed to the Puritan cause that he
accepted a government position under Oliver Cromwell, who ruled as
Lord Protector from 1649 to 1658.  Milton was a radical Christian
individualist who objected strongly and vocally to all kinds of
organized religions which, he believed, put barriers between man and
God.

Milton was therefore a rebel because he identified himself with a
revolutionary cause.  Paradise Lost, his masterpiece, is about
rebellion and its consequences.

One way of looking at the poem is to see it as Milton's working out
of his own position.  Although many readers have thought that Milton
is really Satan, he probably saw himself as Abdiel, the angel who
refuses to go along with Satan.  Milton was arrogant in his belief
that he understood the truth and had a duty to explain it for
everyone's good.

The revolution he lived through changed every aspect of English life.
When he was born in 1608, Shakespeare was still alive and Queen
Elizabeth was only five years dead.  Her influence was still felt.
She had been an absolute monarch who regarded Parliament as a
necessary evil in order to get money for her projects.  When Milton
died in 1674, Charles II reigned as constitutional monarch without
any real power except that granted to him by Parliament.

Milton's circumstances changed drastically during his life.  His
family was reasonably well-to-do.  They lived in London, which was
Milton's home for most of his life.  His father was a scrivener, a
sort of combined notary and banker, who was wealthy enough to afford
private tutors for his son, then schooling at St.  Paul's and
Christ's College, Cambridge University.  Perhaps just as important
for Milton's development was the fact that his father was a musician
and composer.  One of the most attractive features of Milton's poetry
is its marvelous musical qualities.

Since Milton had a small private income, he did not seek a profession
when he left Cambridge, but stayed at home writing poetry and
increasing his already amazing stock of knowledge.  Some people have
said that Milton was one of the most learned men England has ever
known.  He wrote poetry in Latin, Greek, and Italian, and read almost
all the literature surviving from the Greek and Roman periods.  He
even read the Bible in Hebrew.

Just before the religious and political quarrels in England came to a
head, Milton went abroad for fifteen months, meeting and talking with
learned and famous men all over Europe.  He met Galileo and looked
through his telescope, a fact Milton mentions more than once in
Paradise Lost.

When he returned, he put his learning and considerable rhetorical
force at the service of the Puritan cause.  He wrote a series of
scorching political and religious pamphlets:  he condemned bishops,
not only the Catholic ones but those of the Protestant Church of
England; defended the liberty of the press against censorship; even
advocated divorce.  Many of the controversies in which he engaged
with heat and passion we find difficult to sympathize with now, but
Milton championed them with vigor and made himself not only well
known but also well hated.

The Civil War deeply affected his personal relations.  His brother
Christopher adhered to the Royalist side.  Milton married into a
Royalist family in 1642.  He was swept off his feet by a fun-loving
seventeen-year-old, Mary Powell, whose family was originally the
source of Milton's private income (they had bought property from
Milton's father).  The Powells kept Mary away from Milton, in Oxford
where King Charles I made his headquarters, and did not let her
travel to London to live with her husband until 1645.

By that time Milton had been extremely vocal publicly on the subject
of divorce (he even advocated polygamy at one time) and had had an
affair with a Miss Davies.  His was a lively household, for he looked
after and educated his dead sister's three sons.  (One of them became
Milton's biographer and the source of most of what we know about
Milton's life.) He took his duties as schoolmaster very seriously;
the boys were beaten if they did not learn their Latin and Greek
grammar.  The civil disturbances flowed in and out of the house as
Milton's pamphlets provoked angry opposition and his supporters cried
for more.

Only six weeks after King Charles I's head rolled from his body
(Milton's friend Marvell wrote a famous ode on the occasion), Milton
became Latin secretary to Oliver Cromwell.  It was his duty to
compose all the government's diplomatic correspondence in Latin, a
job probably concerned as much with public relations as with accurate
translation.

By this time Milton was blind, probably as a result of a cyst or
tumor of the pituitary gland.  For the rest of his life he depended
on others to read to him and to write at his dictation.  Because he
was not a patient man--he had the arrogance of a person conscious of
his talents--reading and writing for him was not easy.  His daughters
objected to the tyranny he showed in demanding their time and then
complaining when they read incorrectly.

Mary died in 1652, leaving a blind man with three young daughters,
the eldest mentally retarded.  Milton married again in 1657, but his
second wife, whom he called in a famous sonnet his "espoused saint,"
lived only fifteen months and died after giving birth to a daughter,
who also died.  Milton married a third time, to a woman who looked
after him for the rest of his life and managed to bring order to a
household full of quarreling daughters, relatives, and visitors to
the famous writer.

In 1658, Oliver Cromwell had died, leaving England in the incompetent
hands of his son, Richard.  The passions that had caused the Civil
War had cooled, and the king's son was asked to return, but on the
conditions which brought about the English constitutional monarchy.

The coming of Charles II meant the end of Milton's government job.
For a time he was in danger of his life and had to be hidden by
friends--one of his pamphlets had argued strongly in defense of
Charles I's beheading.  Milton retired from public life and devoted
himself to the composition of Paradise Lost.  By the time he had
finished dictating it to whoever got up early in the morning, two
other events had disturbed Milton's never very tranquil life.  In
1665 he was forced by the Great Plague to leave London and live in a
Buckinghamshire village.  A year later, in the Great Fire in 1666,
Milton lost the last piece of property he owned.  He lived the last
few years of his life in considerable poverty, quite unlike the
comfort of his first pampered years in his father's house.

Paradise Lost (1667) is the culmination of his life's work.  His
early poems, the exquisite "L'Allegro," "Il Penseroso," "Lycidas,"
the masque Comus, and the sonnets would all secure him a place among
the finest English poets.  But it is Paradise Lost which makes it
impossible for you to ignore Milton.  He wrote Paradise Regained
afterward, but it has nothing like the stature of Paradise Lost.  (It
is not, as you might think, about Christ's sacrifice, but about his
three-day temptation in the desert by Satan.) Milton's final work,
Samson Agonistes, is a Greek drama as impressive as Paradise Lost in
everything except size.

Milton died in 1674, just after the second edition of Paradise Lost
appeared.  The poem was for that time a modest best seller.  It sold
1,300 copies in the first eighteen months and earned Milton a total
of ten pounds.  By the end of the seventeenth century, the book had
gone through six editions, including one published in 1678 with large
engraved illustrations.  It has never lost its status as a classic,
and it has never stopped being a source of controversy.  People love
or hate Paradise Lost, for as many reasons as it has readers.  The
poem has retained its interest because it deals with subjects that
will always concern us--good, evil, freedom, responsibility.  And
because, like any great work of literature, it's exciting to read.

PARADISE LOST:  THE PLOT

Paradise Lost follows the epic tradition in not telling the story
chronologically, with one event following another in the sequence in
which they occurred.  Instead it begins at midpoint and tells the
rest in flashbacks (and flash-forwards).  Before we consider the plot
as it actually unfolds in Paradise Lost, it is helpful to have in
mind an outline of the story in chronological order.

PARADISE LOST: THE CHRONOLOGICAL SEQUENCE OF EVENTS

God has three aspects, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost or
Holy Spirit.  As creator, God the Father sets everything going, like
a clock, so that he knows what is to happen ...
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin