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John MiltonS Paradise Lost Essay Research Paper (стр. 2 из 2)

earlier are also present. Certainly Milton begins by stating his theme: the

entire story of salvation is summarized in the opening twenty-six lines, and the

purpose of the epic, to "justify the ways of God to men," is stated in

line twenty-six. (All references to the poem itself are from Merritt Y. Hughes’

edition of the complete works.) Milton also opens his narrative "in medias

res"; he begins by asking how Adam and Eve could have fallen. Who could

have caused it? And then we meet an already fallen Satan; it is only in Book VI

that the War in Heaven is actually described. Milton also invokes a Muse (lines

1-26) to inspire and instruct him, as was traditional. E. R. Gregory, in his

article on the use of the muses in Paradise Lost, discusses the use of Clio as

muse and the pairing of Clio and Urania. He includes an examination of

associated iconography of the muses in the history of epic poetry. Other of the

conventions are likewise present. Milton carefully includes a catalogue of the

fallen angels (lines 376-505). He also provides extended formal speeches by the

main characters: see, for example, lines 84-124, 157-91, 242-70, and 622-62 for

major speeches by Satan in Book I. It is on the basis of the eloquence and power

of those speeches that much of the claim for Satan’s position as ‘hero’ is

based. Finally, Milton makes frequent use of the epic simile. Four major

examples are of interest in Book I; they include the simile of the sea monster

(lines 192+), the autumnal leaves (lines 300+), the son/sun (lines 594+), and

the swarming bees (lines 768+). Linda Gregerson points out that "the

Miltonic similes portray knowledge as problematic; they do not suggest we throw

away the tools we have and wait for grace as for rain" (137). She

continues, saying that the similes do a number of tasks: they "convey real

information about the tenor, or locate it in an experiential realm"; they

do this by "stimulating the sensual memory," perhaps inducing "in

the reader an experience which characterizes the subject, " she adds (138).

They also may, she notes, "be proleptic. . . . They often prefigure

subsequent events in the story. Thus Satan is compared to Leviathan . . ."

(139). The similes, she continues, "put is in training of a sort, give us

sometimes a running start and sometimes the edge of the cliff . . ." (140);

they "focus attention upon the act of perception itself and make us aware

that we are not looking alone . . ." (142), that "we read in the

company of those who have read before" (147). James Whaler, in an oft

referenced article regarding the use of animal similes in Paradise Lost, notes

that: From Homer on, certain images have been part of the epic poet’s

inheritance and equipment. Not only has he felt obliged to introduce them

somewhere into his work, but to distribute them in the very proportion observed

by his predecessors. Beasts, plants, any phenomena used in previous epic simile

belonged to him, too, if he could make them at home in a new context. Of course

he was free to originate novel images from contemporary events or his own

personal experience; but Homer’s high precedent, or Vergil’s, prescribed the old

images as well. Milton’s choice of imagery, however, is distinguished from that

of other important epic poets of Western Europe by an iron control over, a

virtual renunciation of, animal similes. (534) Whaler comments that Milton

"selects an animal image only when the perfect opportunity appears"

(545), that Milton "must have felt they had had their day" (538).

Whaler goes on to examine, after a lengthy discussion of other epic animal

similes, Milton’s rare use of such similes, specifically that of the swarming

bees: First, Milton’s bees direct our mind’s eye to winged creatures of the very

size that the spirits . . . are to become. Secondly, they make us contemplate in

advance diminutive creatures which, despite their tininess, we have always liked

to imagine do expatiate and confer their state-affairs, — exactly what the

infernal assembly is going to do. (551) As Gregerson had noted, the simile

"prefigures" and/or is a reflection of other events that are to come

later in the story. Clearly, then, and in spite of some alterations and

modifications, Milton did indeed use classical epic conventions. As Blessington

so artfully writes, "Milton built his epic out of those of Homer and

Virgil, like a cathedral erected our of the ruins of pagan temples whose remains

can still be seen" (xiii).

Blessington, Francis C. Paradise Lost and the Classical Epic. Boston:

Routledge, 1979. Gregerson, Linda. "The Limbs of Truth: Milton’s Use of

Simile in Paradise Lost." Milton Studies 14 (1980): 135-52. Gregory, E. R.

"Three Muses and a Poet: A Perspective on Milton’s Epic Thought."

Milton Studies 10 (1977): 35-64. Lewalski, Barbara Kiefer. Paradise Lost and the

Rhetoric of Literary Forms. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1985. Lewis, C. S. A

Preface to Paradise Lost. New York: Oxford UP, 1942 . Milton, John. Paradise

Lost. In John Milton: Complete Poems and Major Prose. Ed. Merritt Y. Hughes.

Indianapolis: Odyssey, 1957. 173-469. Ricks, Christopher. Milton’s Grand Style.

Oxford: Clarendon, 1963. Steadman, John M. Epic and Tragic Structure in Paradise

Lost. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1976. —. Milton’s Epic Characters: Image and

Idol. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1968. Stein, Arnold. The Art of

Presence: The Poet and Paradise Lost. Berkeley: U of California P, 1977. Thrall,

William Flint, and Addison Hibbard. A Handbook to Literature. Rev. by C. Hugh

Holman. New York: Odyssey, 1960. Tillyard, E. M. W. Studies in Milton. New York:

Barnes and Noble, 1951. Whaler, James. "Animal Simile in Paradise

Lost." PMLA 47 (1931): 534-53.