An unnatural light: engraving by John Baptist de Medina, 1688. |
"Om Asato Maa
Sad-Gamaya |
Tamaso Maa Jyotir-Gamaya |
Mrtyor-Maa Amrtam Gamaya |
Om Shaantih Shaantih Shaantih ||"
(Lead us from Unreality to the Reality
Lead us from the Darkness to the Light
Lead us from the Fear of Death to the Knowledge of Immortality.
Om Peace, Peace, Peace.)
Tamaso Maa Jyotir-Gamaya |
Mrtyor-Maa Amrtam Gamaya |
Om Shaantih Shaantih Shaantih ||"
(Lead us from Unreality to the Reality
Lead us from the Darkness to the Light
Lead us from the Fear of Death to the Knowledge of Immortality.
Om Peace, Peace, Peace.)
The Shanti mantra
or peace hymn from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (1.3.28) illustrates the
Miltonic quest for illumination as essential for a spiritual and constructive
metamorphosis – an image that is carried on right from his only masque Comus to his penning of Paradise Lost. Book III of Paradise Lost begins with an invocation
to the Muse as “Hail, holy light, offspring of Heaven firstborn”, something
that Michael Fixler notes as “that attribute of the divine
power actually communicated as illuminative understanding”. This deviation from
the traditional use of the Light and Darkness imagery only as that of the
ancient and eternal divide between Good and Evil however is not pertinent to Paradise Lost alone, and can be traced
right back to Comus where Milton refuses
to let Darkness represent just the evil and Light just the good.
Thus when he invokes
the Muse in Book I of Paradise Lost
(What in me is dark/ Illumine… [22 – 23]), it is evident without a shred of
doubt that what the poet claims for is absolute mental clarity from the
darkness of ignorance obscuring his soul, and not necessarily a deliverance
from evil. Both the evil and the worship or reverence of everything evil and
its dichotomy with the good is on an apparent level placed in terms of the
light and darkness symbology however. The “tell-tale Sun”, the “nice morn”, the
malicious deprecation in the ‘babbling Eastern Scout’, all demote Light, the “first
of things” (as Milton calls it in Paradise
Lost [7.244]) to the only role Comus sees divinity as playing – that of a
censor (“ ‘Tis only daylight that makes sin” [126]).
Rosemond Tuve in his 1962 essay “The Symbol of Light in
Comus” points out that “First and simplest, this masque (like a dozen others)
uses the ancient enmity between Jove and Night, physical darkness being used as
symbolic of radical moral evil and protectress of its exponents.” Right from
the dragon womb of Stygian darkness, the dark veiled Cotyotto to the ebony
chariot of Hecate – the darkness has been associated with a certain moral,
psychic and spiritual abyss.
The Guardians that the Lady calls upon and the Attendant
spirit however, have been depicted in overtly illuminated terms and images.
“O welcome, pure-eyed Faith, white-handed Hope,
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Thou hovering angel girt with golden wings,
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And thou unblemished form of Chastity!” (Comus, 213 -215)
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The Lady herself, coupled with the Attending spirit and the
Guardians are imaged in words suggesting light, but the third (“And thou
unblemished form of Chastity!/ I see ye visibly”) she sees literally with her
physical eyes, as she does the Moon which comes into view from behind the “sable
cloud”. While one would traditionally expect these free associated images with
divine providence and protection, it is proved to be an exercise in futility as
the Lady still falls under the spell of Comus and is taken to his palace.
Comus, the titular anti-Divine and pro villainous force of
the masque nonetheless, is never associated with the image of night or darkness
as one would expect. As a force of evil, his palace however is stately and not
the Stygian cave of lore. It is to be noted here conversely, that Milton’s Comus
is the son of Bacchus and Circe – essentially
a post-classical invention. In Greek mythology, Comus is the god of festivity, revels and nocturnal
dalliances, a son and a cup-bearer of the god Bacchus,
and represents anarchy and chaos. Unlike the purely carnal Pan or
purely intoxicated Dionysius, Comus was a god of excess. Milton describes him
as the grandson of
the physical embodiment of light itself, having designated Circe as his mother (“Who knows not Circe, / The daughter of the Sun [50-51]) . The image of Night or Darkness is thus
never directly used for what is the most evil force of this masque. Instead,
the woods are referred to as “dungeon of innumerous boughs”, “drear”, “black
shade”, ominous”, and even “dun”. Though the Attendant spirit refers to this
source of darkness and everything dim in a pejorative sense, there is never a clear
indication of darkness as evil, unlike Light as good. Like the woods however,
the darkness is certainly a shelter from the forces of light – a breeding
ground of debauchery which according to Comus, is labeled as Sin by the
daylight itself. Rosemond Tuve, here notes that even the Lady believes “that
even ‘all things ill’are but as unwilling officers that inescapably do the
bidding of ‘Him, the Supreme good’. When she sings to wake Echo, the irony of
Comus’s appearance in answer plays again on these strings of natural,
supernatural, unnatural, and we take in complex notions of the relations
between them long before any such are stated.”
But not only is there plentiful imagery of light in the
speeches of Comus himself, there is no clear indication that night itself is
evil either. Whether there is a clear division here between Darkness and Night
as between Chaos and Night of Paradise Lost, it is however unclear. The Lady
herself does not seem to consider Night as the embodiment of evil, and there is
an indication that greater darkness can darken the “dim” shade of Night. She
calls the night “thievish” because an unnatural “single darkness”, “envious”, had
unseated the starlit night in which an ally of nature itself would give “due
light” to the lost, misled and the lonely:
Why shouldst
thou, but for some felonious end,
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In thy dark lantern
thus close up the stars
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That Nature
hung in heaven, and filled their lamps
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With
everlasting oil, to give due light
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To the misled
and lonely travailler? (Comus,
195-199)
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The “sable cloud” that Comus uses in the conjuration of
Hecate, becomes the Lady’s aid in turn:
Was I
deceived, or did a sable cloud
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Turn forth
her silver lining on the night?
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I did not
err: there does a sable cloud
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Turn forth
her silver lining on the night,
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And casts a
gleam over this tufted grove.
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The irony in the masque however stands in the invocation and
references to Light itself, and not Night or Darkness. While in the generally
established hierarchy of theology, Light, because of its associations with God
and the good, is a redemptive and protective agency, in Comus, its symbolism is
slightly more ambiguous:
"He that has
light within his own clear breast
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May sit i’ the
centre, and enjoy bright day:
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But he that
hides a dark soul and foul thoughts
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Benighted
walks under the mid-day sun;
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Himself is
his own dungeon." (Comus, 385- 389)
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The
Elder Brother’s speech here, is applicable both for Comus and the Lady herself.
While Comus perfectly embodies the “he” with the “dark soul” and “foul thoughts”
who “walks under the mid-day sun”, he is in no self created dungeon. The
dungeon here is more of the Lady’s who, in spite of the departure of Comus, is
unable to break free of the paralytic shackle with the “light” of her own
virtue in her “clear breast” alone. If the mind-body dichotomy of Comus and the
lady is accepted, it is questionable as to how far the virtuous mind of the
Lady is truly free of the limitations of the more physical Comus. Though slated
as the power of Virtue itself, the Lady is unable to enjoy the “bright day” and
is beguiled and abducted by Comus nonetheless.
Another
glaring instance of Light shining with this irony is the usage of the word “glistering”
– once in the stage directions associated with Comus, and once by the Lady. The appearance of Comus on stage with his ‘Monsters’
in a Bacchic and almost Dionysian frenzy is marked by the word “glistering” in
reference to their apparel:
“COMUS enters
with a charming-rod in one hand, his glass in the other; with him a rout of
Monsters, headed like sundry sorts of wild beasts, but otherwise like men and
women, their apparel glistering. They come in making a riotous and unruly
noise, with torches in their hands”
The very
same word is again used by the Lady while calling in for Divine protection from
the darkness surrounding her:
That He, the Supreme
Good, to whom all things ill
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Are but as
slavish officers of vengeance,
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Would send a
glistering guardian, if need were,
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To keep my
life and honour unassailed”(Comus, 217
– 220)
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If her
Guardians (Hope, Faith and Chastity) are indeed glistering, so are the Monsters
of Comus. If nothing, this deliberate usage of the term for both the
traditional elements of the Light and Dark only serves to lessen the dividing
line between the two.
Having
presented the argument, I am of the opinion that instead of clear cut dividing
lines between light and dark, good and evil, Milton aims to show a subtler link
between the two – one of Metamorphosis and an essential duality. Like Good and
evil, light and darkness are the two sides of the same coin. In keeping with
the Greek paradox of the blind seer, Milton’s use of darkness was never
negative – but as an agent essential for the functioning of light, and he does
refer to Night as the “eldest of things” and light as the “first of things” in
Paradise Lost. If the Lady represents the spiritual soul of the being, Comus is
the physical existence of it – and one cannot exist without the other. Even
with the departure of Comus, the Lady is bound to the chair in a very physical
sense. While Milton was not blind at the time he was composing the masque, it
is not improbable that he did consider darkness to be just a veil of sorts, that
has to be illuminated by the poet-prophet with ‘aletheia’. Like ignorance giving way to wisdom and blindness to
insight, the use of darkness is Comus is but a precursor to the Light and is
not laden with any direct association to evil in any way. Milton considers light and vision in
ways that are not purely physical. Instead, he expresses to his reader the need
to understand light and vision as phenomena that are also spiritual and
intellectual, rather than merely physical. There is no strict adherence
to the Judeo-Christian traditions of darkness as solely “far remov'd from God
and light of Heav'n" [Paradise Lost,
I.73].Neither have
any well defined boundaries, and just as Light is susceptible to darkness, so
is the Darkness vulnerable to light. The encompassing metaphors in the
terminology of Light and Darkness in Comus
is thus in the spirit of pastoral imagery and theatrical devices alone and not
associated with any moral or theological elements of the good or the bad only.
REFERENCES:
Milton, John. Comus, a Masque. Project Gutenberg. Web. September 3, 2014.
Fixler,
Michael. “Plato’s Four Furors and the Real Structure of Paradise Lost.”PMLA.92.5
(1977): 952-962.JSTOR.Web. September 3, 2014.
Milton,
John. Paradise Lost. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.,
2005.Print.
Tuve,
Rosemond. The Symbol of Light in Comus
(1962). Milton: Comus and Samson Agonistes Casebook. Macmillan. 1975.
Print.
SANCHALI GHOSH
PG II
ROLL - 08
PG II
ROLL - 08
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