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22 November 2014

Agreeing to disagree: The Brothers’ Debate in Milton’s Comus

Rajdeep Choudhury
PG II
Roll 48.


A. S. P Woodhouse posited that the Brother’s Debate in Comus is a “single train of thought” in his essay “The Argument of Milton’s Comus”. There are two debates in Comus – one is an amicable “disagreement” and the one is evidently an altercation, far from amiable. University disputations can be found in the polemical arguments of the former and Milton exhibits beautifully how the “gay rhetoric” of the eloquent Comus hides wickedness in “reason’s garb”, which the Lady removes with her arguments. The debate between the siblings however is a sort of an expository leading up this dispute. Uncharacteristically, it is a private one and Milton uses it very subtly to expound his own views on the purpose (and also the process) of debating. This is his own commentary on the “unproductive bickering” he had witnessed so many times at Cambridge.

Both the brothers pay careful attention to what the other is saying and seem to be genuinely influenced by each other’s speeches.  Their philosophies may reside at extremes of the spectrum of irrationality, but they work together in a pursuit for truth where each is guided by the other’s judgement. Thus, the debate comes across more as a discussion than a disputation when they arrive at a common conclusion.


Rather than a discourse of conflicting opinions, the disputation has often been considered as a single train of thought. The reasons behind doing that are perfectly understandable, primarily due to the lack of contest in the debate. Instead of rebuttals and refutations each is influenced by the other and there is more of acknowledgement and averting of opinions than forceful contradictions. The Elder Brother is the idealistic optimist who is steadfast in his faith in chastity, while the younger brother is the practical pessimist who is acutely aware of the perils in the forest. Their temperaments contrast each other and complement each other at the same time.

Another reason for critics to consider this as a pseudo-debate has much to do with the fact that they are alone. This is quite a deviation from the usual public disputations. The academic discourses of Milton’s Cambridge days were nothing short of public performances, and both the defens and the opponens were very much concerned with the audience. The form of the masque itself is intimately related to the audience, sometimes requiring the contribution of the audience to the dance at the conclusion of the masque. At the onset of the play, the audience was very much involved in the action when the Egerton children were presented to their parents in the middle of the attendant spirit’s song. However, there is zero awareness of the audience in the speeches in the Brother’s debate. The brothers are concerned with each other only.

Their solitude is further underlined by the united exordiums, in which the Elder Brother’ call for light and the younger brother’s call for sound show them to be lost in darkness and silence. The traditional exordium attempted to capture the attention and sympathy of the audience and occasionally to invoke an agent of inspiration. In the exordium to Prolusion 6, for example, Milton combines flattery with invocation in saying that his listeners are incarnations of the muses and that they therefore provide all the inspiration he needs.[i]

Quite similarly, the two brothers plead Nature to give them both illumination and sound. In the usual exordium the orator calls inspiration and eloquence, which are the pralles of illumination nd sound respectively. The association between illumination and spiritual enlightenment is underlined by the Elder brother when he claims that “he has that light within his own clear breast/May sit in the centre, and enjoy bright day.” This exordium is critical in understanding the basic harmony that exists beneath the surface between the two disputants. They do call upon the stars, the moon and the spirit of sound in a united exordium as their audience. Yet the two separate appeals are so intricately intertwined(both metrically and contextually) that they can be considered as one.

Eld. Bro.
 Unmuffle ye faint stars, and thou fair Moon
That wants’ to love the travellers benizon,
Stoop thy pale visage through an amber cloud,
And disinherit Chaos, that raigns here
In double night of darknes, and of shades; [ 335 ]
Or if your influence be quite damm'd up
With black usurping mists, som gentle taper
Though a rush Candle from the wicker hole
Of som clay habitation visit us
With thy long levell'd rule of streaming light, [ 340 ]
And thou shalt be our star of Arcady,
Or Tyrian Cynosure.   2 Bro. Or if our eyes
Be barr'd that happines, might we but hear
The folded flocks pen'd in their wattled cotes,
Or sound of pastoral reed with oaten stops, [ 345 ]
Or whistle from the Lodge, or village cock
Count the night watches to his feathery Dames,
T' would be some solace yet, some little chearing
In this close dungeon of innumerous boughs.[ii]

The appeals coalesce into a singular exordium, which requests remission from “this close dungeon of innumerous boughs.” These two speeches are tightly connected in form, welded together in a single iambic line. The elder Brother ends his by the 1st 3 iambic feet of the line 341: “or Tyrian cynosure”, which the second brother picks up, ending it with iambic fourth and fifth feet: “or if our eyes”. The break is of the length of a common caesura. The line does not contain a pause in both the Trinity and the Bridgewater manuscripts. If it were not for the stage direction, one can hardly tell that the speaker has been changed in between the 2 lines. The entire debate is characterised by such metrical befuddling, except for one occasion where the change in the speaker is implemented by a separate line. In this debate, the fusion of the lines underlines the agreement between them even in disagreement. However, in the altercation between Comus and the Lady, this technique can be spotted twice but interestingly, whenever the Lady cuts him off while he is speaking it is only to voice her disagreement.


Granted the exordiums complement each other, the first is given to the Elder Brother. There is a consistent presence of light and illumination in the lines of the Elder Brother, a “radiant light” which is present even when the “sun and moon/were in the flat se sunk.” Thus, it is hardly surprising that his first reaction to the “dark soul, and foul thoughts” is to ward off the “double night of darkness” that is hindering his sight. The Younger Brother is much the same, yearning for sound: not the cacophony of “folded flocks” but the resolute voice of his Elder Brother. When the Second Brother speaks, we seem to move closer to the real world and away from the sacramental world with its mythological constructions, but this is only superficially true. He admits that his Elder Brother’s voice gives him assurance and peace in line 347. This further posits that though he plays an integral role in this debate, his function is more of an attentive pupil whose inquisitive nature propels the Master to new observations. He does anticipate some of the central themes the masque deals with (with the aid of his brother). But the first few reactions that he gives to the pessimistic fears of the younger brother are juvenile and foolish:

What need a man forestall his date of grief,
And run to meet what he would most avoid? (l. 61-62)

The younger brother merely wants to haste his sister’s rescue but the Elder Brother’s composure at the present moment seems to be lacking in  logic and practicality. He exhibits a sort of denial when he flatly dismisses the possibility of his sister being in peril- “not being in danger, as I trust she is not” (l. 369). In a dark and cold forest, the Lady is in danger from both humans and wild animals. Against these plausible dangers, the Elder Brother’s argument that her only aggravations are the darkness and the silence is diminutive. He also reasons that “Wisdom’s self/ Oft seeks to sweet retired solitude”, claiming that their lost sister has left them in a conscious decision in order to retire to something like the “peaceful hermitage” of Il Penseroso to contemplate.

While the Elder Brother speaks on the darkness and claims that his sister’s inner virtue provides all the light she requires, the Younger Brother still dwells on the safety of his sister. Contrasting his brother’s ridiculous idealism the Younger brother exhibits farcical practicality

For who would rob a hermit of his weeds,
His few books, or his beads, or maple dish,
Or do his grey hairs any violence? (i. 389-91)

The Elder Brother is fiercely optimistic in nature and he admits to it (“That I incline to hope, rather than fear”). He tries to warn his younger sibling in matter of extreme pessimism by labelling it as “over-exquisite” but reveals himself to be equally extreme in his optimism. But surprisingly we find that he does concede to the point made by the Younger Brother and redirects his optimism towards something more grounded and philosophically sane. He reminds his brother of the “hidden strength” that their sister possesses, which also happens to be the central theme of the masque:

“‘Tis Chastity, my brother, chastity.” (l. 419)

The Elder Brother’s exemplary portrayal of chastity, prior to the debate between the Lady and Comus, anticipates and complements the Lady’s verbalization of Chastity. Elder Brother’s comparatively naïve imitation of conformist icons of radical chastity exposes some mythological and psychological complexity in its development and expression that a more sophisticated account of the virtue might knowingly repress or refine. Such is the case with the complex image of Minerva and the gorgon shield, which flashes up out of an Ovidian repository that forms the sad intimation of the Lady’s suffering. “Rigid looks of chaste austerity” indicate the double power of chastity over the predatory eye. The archetypal virgin, Minerva, goddess of wisdom and militant chastity, petrifies her foes both with her looking and with how she looks. She arrests and intimidates the gaze of the potential voyeur with an impenetrably inflexible and keen gaze of her own, as well as with an armoured body-image resistant to violence of thought or action. Her petrifying power results from her appropriation of and merger with Medusa, her opposite. In the Elder Brother’s iconography, Minerva wears rather than carries the Gorgon shield, suggesting in the figure a coincidence of female opposites. [iii]

He now adds to imagined list of perils that can befall their sister, taking into consideration “Infamous hills, sandy perilous wilds.” His final claim is that no matter how big the dangers are, natural or supernatural, their sister is shielded by the “complete steel” of her chastity. Aside from numerous references to non-Christian allusions like Dian, Minerva and Cupid for added authority he also comes up with theologically steadfast allusions. He foresees her angelic protection. However, this is in contradiction to his earlier where he claims that chastity is enough to protect itself. He reassured his brother with more cogent optimism, claiming that their sister is guarded by angels who watch her and protect her. The second brother concurs with his elder and applauds divine philosophy. This can be construed as Milton’s criticism of scholastic philosophy, which according to him is the topic of “dull fools.”

Most critics have dismissed this debate as ineffectual. Barabara Traister calls it a pointless debate that takes the brothers nowhere until the Attendant Spirit comes to sort them out. The brothers , however, reach the conclusion far before the Attendant Spirit arrives. The brothers essentially present Milton’s opportunity to add philosophical speculation. The speeches of the Elder clearly enlarge the theme of the Lady’s debate with Comus. Sears Jayne sees the Brother’s function as “expository” and their debate embodies an affected piece of theological and philosophical ideas of chastity and virtue.



[i] Arenas of Conflict: Milton and the Unfettered Mind, edited by Kristin Pruitt McColgan, Charles W. Durham
[ii] http://www.dartmouth.edu/~milton/reading_room/comus/text.shtml
[iii] Lady in the Labyrinth: Milton's Comus as Initiation  by William Shullenberger

21 November 2014

A Textual Analysis of Paradise Lost pertaining to the Rib That is a Woman: Eve, Submission and the (Inevitable) Loss of Agency

John Milton, in his twelve book long epic Paradise Lost, explored the dynamics between the two sexes through the First couple: Adam and Eve, in their journey from Prelapsarian bliss to Postlapsarian agony. Their relationship, at first, at best viewed as a simple and naive one, becomes that of a contract, not unlike that observed in a master-slave dialectic, constructed through oppressive and painful discourses, strictly defined and working towards a definite end or profit (Milton does mention Columbus in his epic, incidentally). We shall try to look into the changing concept of Eve throughout the twelve books, taken chronologically.

Book IV

Eve is first mentioned in Paradise Lost through Satan's eyes, in Paradise, where her physical appearance is thoroughly conveyed to us:

"Not equal, as their sex not equal seemed; 
For contemplation he and valour formed, 
For softness she and sweet attractive grace; 
He for God only, she for God in him;"
The sexes are deemed unequal to begin with, keeping in line with Christian ideology and the Bible. The idea of God is a bit ambiguous here, does Milton mean Adam contains Lord the God in him, or does Eve consider some other entity she identifies as God, residing in Adam? Anyway, both of them exist for their God, wherever He might be.

The second part we are concerned with is

" 'O thou for whom 
 And from whom I was formed flesh of thy flesh,
 And without whom am to no end, my guide
              And head, what thou has said is just and right. "

She is, according to the Bible, from Adam, a part of him. She considers Adam and his words to be sacrosanct. Maybe this is the God she is for: Adam's word?


The next crucial part in our analysis of Eve's formation of her self is thus:

" "What thou seest, 
 What there thou seest, fair creature, is thyself:
               With thee it came and goes: but follow me,
 And I will bring thee where no shadow stays
              Thy coming, and thy soft embraces-he
              
              Whose image thou art; ..."

When the voice leads her away from the mirror, and to Adam, it affixed her image of her self as Adam, and not as she, a separate entity: Eve. She eventually becomes convinced, till she Falls at least, that she is an other Adam, only less of an Adam: his image.


The next part describes Adam's reaction when he sees Eve for the first time:

" "Return, fair Eve;
              Whom fliest thou? Whom thou fliest, of him thou art,
               
              His flesh, his bone; to give thee being I lent

             Out of my side to thee...


             ... Part of my soul I seek thee, and thee claim


           My other half"; with that thy gentle hand   

           
           Seized mine; I yielded, and from that time see


           How beauty is excelled by manly grace

           And wisdom, which alone is truly fair."


A lot of things happen here. Adam, convinced that sees a walking piece of flesh, his flesh, reclaims it as his own, while in reality it is a subject who has just started to think. Suppressing Eve's intellectual growth, Adam makes her his own, effectively foreclosing any chance of her declaration of her self as a free agent and not an image of Adam. Any possibility of the female sex seen independent of the male is destroyed here, in the Prelapsarian reality.


Eve happily obliges to being subjugated by not acknowledging it as subjugation, rather seeing it as the natural order of things:



" 'My author and disposer, what thou bidd'st
              Unargued I obey: so God ordains:

              God is thy law, thou mine; to know no more

              Is woman's happiest knowledge, and her praise."


Book IV lays the groundwork for the existence of Eve as without agency, later broken, and even later, strongly enforced than ever.


Book V


Nothing new happens here, only a systematic, blissful show of submission from Eve, as she was programmed to do.

What is noticeable here is that Milton hinted at Eve's final fate through Raphael's greeting to her:
"On whom the Angel "Hail"
              Bestowed- the holy saturation used

             Long after to blest Mary, second Eve:


            'Hail, mother of mankind, whose fruitful womb

  
            Shall fill the world numerous with thy sons..."

Then, staying true to God's ordain, Raphael and Adam made no effort to include Eve in their very lengthy conversation,

because what is the use of bringing in Adam's image when Adam is already there? Eve is useful for specific, pre-defined activities, and knowing of God's creations and the rebellion amongst his angels firsthand from God's messenger isn't one of them. This is further clarified at the beginning of Book VII.

Book VIII


In here, we come to know of Eve's desires in terms of her acknowledgement of Adam as the supreme authority:

"So spake our sire, and by his countenance seemed
              Entering on studious thoughts abstruse; which Eve

              Perceiving, where she sat retired in sight,

            
              With lowliness majestic from her seat,

              And grace that won who saw to wish her stay


              Rose, and went forth among her fruits and flowers...


           ...Yet went she not as not with such discourse


            Delighted, or not capable her ear


            Of what was high; such pleasures she reserved,


            Adam relating, she sole auditress;


             Her husband the relater she preferred


             Before the angel, and of him to ask


             Chose rather; he, she knew, would intermix


             Grateful digressions, and solve high dispute


             With conjugal caresses: from his lip


             Not words alone pleased her. ..."


She was engrossed in and content with whatever is being given to her. That is the greatest difference between Prelapsarian and Postlapsarin Eve: the difference between the feeling of being fulfilled and that of feeling incomplete.


To expand on this feeling of fulfillment, we look at another part from Book VIII, portion of Raphael's admonishment to Adam:

"...Wherever placed, let him dispose; joy thou
            In what he gives to thee, this Paradise

            And thy fair Eve; heaven is for thee too high..."


By divine ordain, Adam is told to be satisfied with Paradise and "his" Eve, and consequently, Eve with Adam.


The blase, one-sided, ignorant conjugal relationship exists between Adam and Eve in Paradise precisely because Christian "true love" consists of denial of everything except the Postlapsarian constructs of human carnal desire and lust:



"In loving thou dost well; in passion not,
             Wherein true love consists not; love refines

              The thoughts, and heart enlarges- hath his seat

              In reason, and is judicious, is the scale

              By which to heavenly love thou may'st ascend


              Not sunk in carnal pleasure; for which cause


              Among the beasts no mate for thee was found.' "


We are beginning to understand why Eve was created in the first place, from this excerpt. This explains Eve's primary function: to enable Adam to love and make love in a way that is not considered animalistic, or, in the way mankind is forbidden by Lord the God to love.



Book IX


The ninth book marks the break in mankind's fate, in the sense that mankind Fell from Paradise, forever destined to roam the earth, and to face death, hunger, guilt, shame, and pain, banished from the Garden. The permanent loss of mankind's innocence happens in a primal scene, perpetrated by Eve, with Satan as the snake in disguise acting as the catalyst for Eve's action.


Things come to a boil here, not just because of the Fall, but because, for the fist time, the woman has beaten the man to something that has never been attempted by mankind. Eve takes the charge of the change, not Adam, the phallocentric order of nature is defied, by noone else but the woman, and she pays no heed to the masculine urge to pioneer an event, a state, a rebellion.


Of course, for that act of disobedience, not to God, but to man, she has to pay, through the archetypal act of Adam passing the buck in front of the sovereign, through the sovereign's sentence, and through the final agreement Adam imposes on her. We'll come to all of that later.


For now, let us go back to the Prelapsarian portion in Book IX, where Adam and Eve debates whether they should work in proximity with each other, in which, remarkably, Eve has the last say, hinting at the turn of events about to take place. Because, of course, Eve needs to be portrayed as someone who made the fist step towards ruin, and the ruin is to be sanctioned by nothing less than the failure of Adam, being assertive and losing his 'manhood' by letting Eve have the last say. Let us recall parts of the debate in which Eve retains her lack of agency, but doesn't feel hesitant to speak her mind, again, for the very first time in the epic. This particular excerpt is Adam restating the 'original' female function:



"...for nothing lovelier can be found 
              In woman than to study household good,
          
              And good works in her husband to promote."

At the same time, emphasising on the male function:

"Or this, or worse, leave not the faithful side
           That gave thee being, still shades thee and protects." 

Eve, on hearing Adam's argument, expresses resentment (for the fist time):
"But that thou shouldst my firmness therefore doubt
              To God or thee, because we have a foe

              May tempt it, I expected not to hear."

Adam tries to take back control from the conversation by using ingratiation, but that is routine in Eve's life, she takes them as she hears them, a part of her daily discourse.

Eve then leaves Adam's side, symbolising the split between the two sexes for the first time, from the state of the female sex being a fraction of the male. She has done it: she has effed the ineffable. Thus, these lines are of remarkable significance in the epic:
"Thus saying, from her husbands hand her hand
              Soft she withdrew..."

However, she is in no way equal to Adam, in worth, as clear from Satan's assessment of her and Adam:

             "Her husband, for I view far round, not nigh,
           
              Whose higher intellectual more I shun,
           
              And strength, of courage haughty, and of limb

             Heroic built, ... 

              ... She fair, divinely fair, fit love for gods,
             
              Not terrible, though terror be in love,

             And beauty, not approached by stronger hate, ..."

Moving on from Satan's masterful usage of rhetorical skills to get Eve to taste the forbidden fruit, we have Eve slowly entering the realm of reason from the realm of faith, illustrated in one single beautiful passage. The first reasoning she does is with herself, to share her experience with Adam, regardless of the quality and consequence of her experience:

           "So to add what wants

           In female sex, the more to draw his love,

           And render me more equal, and perhaps-

           A thing not undesirable - sometime

           Superior; for inferior, who is free?

          This may be well; but what if God have seen,

          And death ensue? Then I shall be no more;

          And Adam, wedded to another Eve,

          Shall live with hr enjoying, I extinct;

          A death to think. Confirmed, then, I resolve

          Adam shall share with me in bliss or woe;

          So dear I love him that with him all deaths

          I could endure, without him live no life."

Two major points are to be noted here. Eve, for the first time, wants to be seen equal to Adam (apologies for too many "for the first time"). Secondly, Eve does not want Adam to taste the fruit for benevolent purposes, she does it out of anxiety of losing him and have God replace him with another Eve, which contradicts her first impulse. She knows she is replaceable, born out of Adam's rib, but there is and will be one Adam, who came from God, subjecting Eves to the same treatment, of formal objectification. She wants to be equal and at the same time realizes the futility of her wish. Thus, to safeguard her own interests, which still is to be with Adam, she uses him as insurance against the possibility of she suffering the punishment alone. She cannot come to terms with solitude, as a unitary entity, being bound to Adam in every possible way.

Thus, being reborn in reason, she tries to persuade Adam to take part in her undertaking. Adam, still in his Prelapsarian state, blissful in his perception of their eternal togetherness, agrees after the initial shock from Eve's action:

      "My own in thee, for what thou art is mine;

        Our state cannot be severed; we are one,

        One flesh, to lose thee were to lose myself."

How ironic is it that while Eve fell for her initial need to be independent, Adam fell for his desire to keep Eve dependent on him forever. He fell because he failed to let go of his possessive nature, to recognize Eve's difference, to acknowledge her as a separate entity. He fell because to him Eve was still his rib, a piece of flesh, made by God to enable him to display "true love".

What is of further importance in Book IX is the quarrel between Adam and Eve, after they both realize their Fall, and the game of passing the buck begins, as Adam draws first blood, to which Eve replies:

        "As good have grown there still a lifeless rib.

         Being as I am, why didst not thou the head

       Command me absolutely not to go, ...

        ...Hadst thou been firm and fixed in thy dissent,

        Neither had I transgressed, nor thou with me.' "


Book X

In Book X we see Adam justifying his act, and the Divine agent passing judgment on Adam and Eve's sin, along with some choice remarks on God's motive in creating Eve. To begin with Adam:

          "This woman, whom thou mad'st to be my help,

          And gav'st me as thy perfect gift, so good,

          So fit, so acceptable, so divine,

           That from her hand I could not suspect no ill, ..."

Moving to God's Son's assessment of Eve:

           " 'Was she thy God, that her thou didst obey

           Before his voice: Or was she made thy guide

           Superior, or but equal, that to her

           Thou didst resign thy manhood, and the place

           Wherein God set thee above her, made of thee

           And for thee, whose perfection far excelled

           Hers in all real dignity? Adorned

           She was indeed, and lovely, to attract

           Thy love, not thy subjection; ..."

So Adam was being sentenced for being an Eve to Eve, or for letting Eve be an Adam to him. That sheds a lot of (divinely sanctioned) light on the intended role of the woman in society.

Eve was punished as such:

          "Thy sorrow I will greatly multiply...

           ... ,and to thy husband's will

          Thine shall submit; he over thee shall rule.' "

An attempt, thus, at restoration of the inequality between the sexes. A balancing act to counterbalance Eve's aggressiveness in pioneering the Fall.

Then, as Adam and Eve begins to digest their punishment, Adam finally admits to his lack of perceived 'manhood' in the first place through a vitriolic diatribe at Eve:

       "Out of my sight, thou serpent! That name best

        Befits thee, with him leagued, thyself as false

       And hateful: nothing wants, but that thy shape...

      ...To trust thee from my side, imagined wise,

      Constant, mature, proof against all assaults,

       And understood not all was but a show,

       Rather than solid virtue, all but a rib..."

And puts forward his idea of an ideal world:

       "... O why did God,

       Creator wise, ...

        ...not fill the world at once

       With men as angels, without feminine;

       Or find some other way to generate

       Mankind? ..."

Eve, on the other hand, crushed by her sentence, fails to reciprocate Adam's accusations. She chooses to be pacifist, in agreeing with Adam and proposing a way out of their eternal suffering: repentance and supplication to God. This eventually leads her to lose her agency in an even more permanent form, as we shall see in Book XII.

Book XII

After all this and then some, Adam and the God and his angels form a covenant, a pact between them, after reducing the severity of Adam's and Eve's torment by banishing them from Paradise but freeing them from the most terrible clauses in their sentences. Adam agrees to the pact, but then again, the pact is such that it needs both Adam's and Eve's approval. Eve is not be told about this in the first place: she is co-opted into the agreement. To work around this, the angel Micheal says such:

      "Her also I with gentle dreams have calmed,

      Portending good, and all her spirits composed

      To meek submission: thou at season fit
     
      Let her with thee partake what thou hast heard- ..."

And then Adam ran along to Eve, woke her, and bound her in the contract of begetting the mortal form of God's Son, in no uncertain terms:

     "I carry hence: though all by me is lost,

     Such favour I unworthy am vouchsafed

    By me the promised seed shall all restore."

A return for Adam, therefore, to his original place, to be responsible, denying Eve any importance in the grand scheme of things. Eve, demoted from a place for Adam to display his "true love", to the bearer of his seed, and nothing more. Thus, the capitalistic bond of sealing the woman in her image of being the baby factory, with the baby perpetuating the system of oppression and subjugation in one form or the other. Adam and Eve: the perfect master-slave relationship.


Subhajit Das,
PG- I
Roll Number- 34.

20 November 2014

Character of Satan

Debleena Das, PG II

Satan is the most important character in Paradise Lost. Though the action of the poem turns round Man’s first disobedience, yet the character that gives epic grandeur to Paradise Lost is that of Satan. Though Satan represents evil, he has a greatness of his own. He is a born leader and would not shrink from any risk or danger to help his followers. To him weakness is crime.


Fallen cherub to be weak is miserable
Doing or suffering”.


The first two books of Paradise Lost depict the greatness and grandeur of Satan. In fact he appears as the real hero of Paradise Lost. It is surely the simple fact that Paradise Lost exists only for one character that is Satan just as Iliad exist for Achilles and Odyssey for Odysseus. It is the figure of Satan that the imperisible significance of Paradise Lost is centred. His vast unyielding agony symbolizes the profound antimony of modern consciousness. But as the poem proceeds the character of Satan degenerates. When on reaching Earth, he enters into a serpent, h e is completely degenerated. Pride was the cause of his fall from the Heaven-pride that had raised him to contend with the Mightiest. From grand that he was in the beginning, he is changed into a mean cunning fellow in the end.


While portraying Satan, Milton projects himself into him and expresses his own indomitable personality through him. Milton himself was proud and stood against the tyranny of the king and though he had been defeated he remains as courageous and defiant in the teeth of adversity as Satan. It is because Milton expressed his own feeling through Satan that the portraiture of Satan’s charecter

Is so intense and powerful. His ambition was greatest and his punishment was the greatest but not so his despair for fortitude was as great as his sufferings. His power of action and suffering was equal. So we can easily say the Satan is the real hero in Milton’s Paradise Lost. 


“Kings for such a Tomb would wish to die”: Milton’s Monument of Words

Rohitashwa Sarkar,
PGI,
Roll No: 37.



“ That° we on Earth with undiscording voice
May rightly answer that melodious noise;°
As once we did, till disproportion’d° sin
Jarr’d against natures chime…” [1]

These lines in Milton’s At a Solemn Musick introduce us to the poet’s view of sin, and consequently, Death, which is related to sin in his entire early oeuvre. In the poem, at first Milton imagines an unfallen or redeemed harmony between Heaven and Earth in terms of music, which is a recurring motif in his poetry. Christian agents like angels and cherubiks play alongside Sirens and are mingled with an Orpheus-like figure who will breath life and inspiration into rocks and other dead things with his music. But ‘disproportion’d sin’ is the persistent wrong tune in the fallen Christian Universe. How do we understand the term disproportioned? Perhaps we could use time as an instrument: in a scribd essay by someone nicknamed tatertot, the author writes “The poem associates heaven with eternity and earth with time[2]. By earth he means a post-lapserian world, where time is linear and forward moving, as opposed to the eternity in Heavenly-time. The two are different time dimensions, therefore meaningful in different orders of language, which makes their harmonius mingling impossible. What troubles Milton is the placement of one (Earthly dimensions) within the other (Eternal Time). Therefore Eartliness, which is a result of sin, is an aberration to the poet, an element that does not conform to the rules of the language it is a part of; it is familiar but incongruous and therefore ‘Uncanny’; it lacks closure. I will argue that in most of Milton’s early poetry that deals with Death and Sin, the poet attempts to enclose the uncanny in causality, metre and allusions to attempt to normalize it. His ‘Poetry of Death’ emerges therefore as a therapeutic exercise. For this purpose I will look at most of his early poetry.

In 1631 ( atleast that is the date that Milton gives to it), he wrote two epitaphs on the deceased University carrier Hobson, who was forced to rest and cease his regular activities when the plague hit England. Milton’s enterprise in both the poems is to speculate and argue regarding the cause of Hobson’s death – in the first one, he personifies Death, and says the former would never have gotten to Hobson had the latter not had to resign from work; in the latter, titled ‘Another on the Same’, he uses analogies from Classical astronomy (the allusion to time and motion is from Aristotle’s Physics, 4.11-12) to explain the same cause. To begin with, the well-argued cause itself gives a structure and consolation to Death. It implies that if a person dies, the reasons can be traced to factors which influenced his life, and also implies that one can choose healthier options on the basis of such causality. An important point worth noting here is the plague, the principle agent, often features in Milton’s early poetry as a punishment or damnation of sorts; ‘black perdition’ is the name he grants it; this implies that the attempt at overriding or normalizing sin in poetic idiom has only been partially successful. But he tries nonetheless. The other way in which he tries to conquer Death is through mastery of idiom, which is what Stella P. Revard says: “they (the epitaphs) resemble in some ways the Latin funera (included in the Poemata) that Milton wrote for Cambridge dignitaries, as they allow the poet to exercise his pungent wit with one conceit after another that allude to Hobson’s occupation.”[3] The employment of a series of linguistic devices as a means of coping with death is common in all of human history, of course. Mourning rites, epitaphs, obituaries are there for all to see; it is his Poetry for Milton, the significance of which lies in the crucial perspective it grants the student of his poetry.

In other poems, the hope of redemption is far more apparent. This is where Milton’s concerns regarding sin and Death become properly visible. On the Epitaph on the Marchioness of Winchester, for example, Milton compares her to Rachel – the wife of Jacob who died in bearing his second child, and has a dream that the Marchioness will reunite with the former in a Heaven-like space. In the epitaph for the Bishop of Winchester, the comparison, or condensation more-like, is with Moses. Therefore these narratives converge into a hope of re-union with the lost harmony. Even though Milton here is speaking directly regarding redemption or resurrection, the drive here is the same as before: rationalization of Death. The difference is, in this particular system, Milton can directly engage sin. In the earlier quoted epitaphs, that concern was at best present in the sense that it was repressed or conspicuously demoted to the background to the foreground of an argument regarding the necessity of work. Here Milton can take more space and time to evoke the feeling, and therefore exercise more poetic license, experiment further with form and in effect tackle Death with a larger arsenal. It is not for nothing that the size of these poems is greater than the earlier two.

It is in On Shakespeare that Milton raises the function of writing to a permanent defiance of Death. Milton says Shakespeare does not require a statue or a starry pyramid as a monument, but has “ in our wonder and astonishment/ Hast built thy self a live-long° Monument.”[4]  Shakespeare’s immortality arises from the impressions his work creates. His creation is his redemption. This has meta-textual associations in atleast two ways: one in that Milton is attempting a similar exercise: through his writing, in all the poems mentioned, he is trying to render Death redundant. The other manner in which Milton’s exercise is meta-textual for this poem in particular, of course, is it is a Shakespearean sonnet written in traditional iambic pentameter. This makes Milton’s poem an ode to the deceased, which also turns it into a monument to Shakespeare. Milton, therefore, following Shakespeare’s lead, is able to build a monument through words for the man who built his own monument through his own words, which is a fine point of departure or entry for the final point I wish to raise.

It is this: each Milton poem that is about someone else’s death is only peripherally about someone else, even though that is what is apparent on the surface. The real significance of his poetic enterprise exists outside the text. The real death that he is trying to combat, in small, determined bursts, is his own impending one. Like every little poem that builds an enclosure like a coffin or a shrine of words around a deceased figure, the latent hope that is ultimately apparent is that Milton’s oeuvre will also be his final, eternal resting place, the heaven to which he will return after his tryst on Earth.  This concern regarding his own Fame, Work and Death is embraced with greater courage and directness in later poems, which proves the persistence of the concerns throughout his life. In Oh his Blindness, for example, writing is ‘God’s work’, i.e. the work that has been given to Milton by God, which he realizes he must keep doing despite what he thought was an obstacle. The fact that he thinks of his poetry as a sacred duty shows that he considers it his sole passport to redemption and immortality, whether in Heaven or on Earth.





[1] Stella P.Revard, ed.,” At a Solemn Musick”, John Milton: Complete Shorter poems, pg 38.
[2] "Milton at a Solemn Music Analysis." Scribd. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Nov. 2014.
[3] Stella P.Revard, ed.,“Introduction to the 1645 volume: Poems of Mr. John Milton”, John Milton: Complete Shorter poems, pg 3.
[4] “On Shakespear. 1630.”, John Milton: Complete Shorter Poems

Puritan and Classical elements in Milton’s minor poems

Nilanjana Majumder
PG-II, Roll- 101200402031
In Milton's poetry, we see a fusion of elements both of the Renaissance and the Reformation. The Renaissance was characterized by a renewed interest in the writings of the ancient Greek and Roman authors. The scholars of the Renaissance period infused into their works the beauties of ancient Greek and Roman literature. Love for beauty, music and art became the governing passion of writers during Renaissance. The glorification of beauty, music, art and love for exuberance of life, that is also known as "Hellenism" is evident in the majority of Milton's work.


The Reformation, on the other hand, was a religious movement aimed at the cultivation of religious, moral and spiritual values. The Reformation or Hebrewism stands for spiritual discipline, moral austerity and an otherworldly outlook. More than artistic pursuits, Puritans were concerned about religious morality.


Milton's poetry showcases the influence of both these movements. He was a child of both the Renaissance and the Reformation. His childhood was spent at a time when the Renaissance was in the ascendancy. His youth witnessed the rise of Puritanism and his old age marked the consummation of the Puritan ideals. So Milton's poetry became a link between the age of Renaissance and the Puritan age. He was both a belated Elizabethan and a fervent disciple of the Reformation.


A brief consideration of his works would fully justify the view that he is a connecting link between the Elizabethan and the Puritan age. The poems he wrote during his college days, both in English and Latin, are for the most part simply a young man's experimental work and are of little significance. But the "Ode on the Morning of Christs's Nativity" is an exception. Even though the subject matter of the poem is biblical, Milton celebrates pagan imagery through it, thus, revealing a fusion of Renaissance and Reformation influences.


His minor poems were chiefly written under the influence of the Renaissance and the Puritan element was quite subordinate in those poems. Thus, in "L' Allegro" and "Il Penseroso", with their charming contrasted pictures of man, nature and art as seen through the medium of mood, and the depiction of gladness and melancholy, there is little that is puritan. "L Allegro" strikes a positively anti-Puritan note when Milton invokes the Goddess of joy:


“Haste thee nymph, and bring with thee
Jest and youthful Jollity,
Quips and cranks, and wanton wiles,
Nods, and becks, and wreathed smiles,
Such as hang on Hebe s cheek, And love to live in dimple sleek;
Sport that wrinkled Care derides,
Ana. Laughter holding both his sides.” (L’ Allegro lines 25-32)


In "ll Penseroso" the tone and spirit are much more subdued, and they put Milton nearer the Puritans. The Goddess of Melancholy is described as a "pensive nun" and has a few definitely Christian associations. But there is the same Renaissance element visible too. Milton likes Plato and Hermes. He loves to read Chaucer and see tragic performances.


“ With thrice great Hermes, or unsphere
The spirit of Plato, to unfold
What worlds or what vast regions hold
The immortal mind that had forsook
Her mansion in this fleshly nook:
And of those demons that are found
In fire, air, flood, or underground,
Whose power hath a true consent
With planet or with element.
Sometimes let gorgeous Tragedy
In sceptred pall come sweeping by,
Presenting Thebes, or Pelops’ line,
Or the tale of Troy divine,
Or what of later age
Ennobled hath the buskined stage.” ( Il Penseroso, lines 88-102)


Then with "Comus", we see a distinct stage in the development of his mind. Though mildly, the Puritan spirit now makes its influence felt, not only in the Poet’s increased earnestness, but also in the specific quality of his moral teaching. On the literary side, this work too belongs to the Renaissance; for it is one of the finest examples of a “Masque” a genre of drama that is considered to be the embodiment of the Renaissance spirit. However, even though Milton penned a popular form of Renaissance art, he filled it with a strenuous moral spirit. Milton's masque is in spirit and purpose highly puritanical. Its only Renaissance characteristic is its form. The simple story of a lady lost in the woods, lured away by god Comus and his band of revellers, and rescued by her brothers with the help of an attendant spirit and a river nymph, is a patient allegory of virtue attacked by sensuality and overcoming it by divine aid. The masque is loaded with classical pagan influence, yet the nobility of its tone and faith in god which is expressed through it, testify to the growing power of religious inspiration over the poet’s thought.


Finally, in “Lycidas” we witness the influence of Puritanism which is political and ecclesiastical as well as spiritual and ethical. Lycidas (1637) was a pastoral elegy written on the death of Milton's friend Edward King who was drowned in a shipwreck near Anglesea. As in Comus, its form and theme are representative of two different cultures. The form of Lycidas is classical but the theme and expression are indicative of a puritanic spirit. We find more of Milton than King in the poem. King's death prompts Milton to think of the futility of his own poetic craft:
“Alas! What boots it with incessant care
To tend the homely slighted shepherd's trade,
And strictly meditate the thankless Muse?
Were it not better done as others use,
To sport with Amaryllis in the shade,
Or with the tangles ofNeaera 's hair?” (Lycidas, lines 64-69)
But Milton expresses his intention to devote himself to serious and religious poetry, as Phoebus tells him that his reward is not fame, "that last infirmity of noble mind' He should, rather, "in heaven expect his meed." Then as a zealous Puritan Milton finds the opportunity to lash the corrupt clergy who lead a comfortable life whereas:
“The hungry sheep look up, and are not fed,
But swollen with wind, and the rank mist they draw,
Rot inwardly, and foul contagion spread.” (Lycidas, lines 125- 127)


From a study of the works of Milton, it is obvious that the Puritanism influenced him greatly but it should never be forgotten that the culture of the Renaissance was never totally exterminated by his Puritanical bent of mind. On the one hand, he drank deep of classical poetry and philosophy and inherited all the culture and humanism of the Renaissance and on the other, he had a deeply religious temperament, and was a profound student of the Bible and the literature of the scripture. Thus at the back of Milton’s mind there were the best fruits of classical scholarship and Biblical learning.


Bibliography
L’ Allegro- John Milton
Il Penseroso- John Milton

Lycidas- John Milton

18 November 2014

Milton's response to the Book of Revelation: Apocalyptic allusions in Paradise Lost.

SULAGNA CHOWDHURY
PG II
ROLL NO- 15


"Apocalypse" is a genre of revelatory literature with a narrative framework, in which a revelation is mediated by an otherworldly being to a human recipient, disclosing a transcendent reality which is both temporal, insofar as it envisages eschatological salvation, and spatial, insofar as it involves another, supernatural world.
                                               - Semeia.

In biblical terminology, an "apocalypse" is not an event, but a "revelation" that is recorded in written form. It is a piece of crisis literature that "reveals" truths about the past, present, and/or future in highly symbolic terms. "The Apocalypse" is also the alternate name (used especially by Protestants for The Book of Revelation. The Book of Revelation had its origin in a time of crisis, but it remains valid and meaningful for Christians of all time. In the face of apparently insufferable evil, either from within or from without, all Christians are called to trust in Jesus’ promise, 
“Behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age” .
Those who remain steadfast in their faith and confidence in the risen Lord need have no fear. Suffering, persecution, even death by martyrdom, though remaining impenetrable mysteries of evil, do not comprise an absurd dead end. No matter what adversity or sacrifice Christians may endure, they will in the end triumph over Satan and his forces because of their fidelity to Christ the victor. This is the enduring message of the book; it is a message of hope and consolation.

The figure of the Antichrist is predominant in the Book of Revelation. The word "antichrist" means in opposition to or in the place of Christ, meaning attempting to be a counterfeit or a false representation of Christ. There have been many manifestations of Antichrist in various sects of Christian belief, the major rift arose in the views of the Catholics and the Protestants. While Catholics expected Antichrist to materialise in a particular individual, Protestants insisted that the idea is a cumulative mystery of iniquity rampant in the world, the manifestations being the institutions like the papacy, national entities like the Ottoman Empire, extreme radicals like the millenarians at Munster, and individual persecutors of the elect, basically those guilty of encroaching on the consciences of mankind. It was in the twilight of such a background that Milton studied, and responded to, the Book of Revelation. He uses the Protestant principle in Paradise Lost . Although the first two books of  Paradise Lost shows Satan as a nominally credible opponent of the Almighty, Milton's Satan gathers in himself many facets of Antichrist. For one, the designation of Satan as 'great Sultan' invokes the medieval identification of Antichrist with the Ottoman Empire. Another far more eloquent facet is established when Milton asserts Satan's parody of the activities of God.  It envisages what is represented in the series of parodies enacted by the Forces of Darkness in The Book of Revelation: the dragon's bestowal of 'great authority' in the style appropriate solely to Christ, the ominous figure seated on a white horse in imitation of Christ and particularly the demonic trinity- the dragon, the first beast and the second beast- to be false god, a false Christ and a false prophet. While in Faerie Queen Spenser adapted the idea of Satan as 'God's Ape', Milton embedded it into the very fabric of Paradise Lost. The grandiose prospect of Satan seated on the throne of Hell in plain emulation of the Most High is tempered with the narrator's sarcasm:
                                 
High on a throne of royal state, which far
Outshone the wealth or Ormus and of Ind,
Or where the gorgeous East with richest hand
Showers on her kings barbaric pearl and gold,
Satan exalted sat, by merit raised
To that bad eminence; and, from despair
Thus high uplifted beyond hope, aspires
Beyond thus high, insatiate to pursue
Vain war with Heaven;
                                 - Book II, Paradise Lost.

The word 'Barbaric' explicates itself, diagnostic as it is of the nature of both Antichrist and his agents like the Ottoman Empire or the papacy. The thematic pattern of 'God's Ape' also operates within an 
apocalyptic context in the way that the parallelism between Satan's offer destroy man, and the Son's to redeem him, is underlined by the moment of silence that precedes each. It obliges one to recall the 
sombre occasion in The Apocalypse, just after the opening of the seventh seal, when the 'silence in 
heaven about the space of half an hour' is followed by the blaring of the trumpets and the devastation of the created order. In that moment, the lines of demarcation between Christ and Antichrist are drawn firmly in the Apocalypse as they are in Paradise Lost. 

Milton's response to the Book of Revelation in Paradise Lost is comprised of many elements. The 
critical invocation of the Apocalypse at the outset of Book IV is a major element. 
              
                                   " For that warning voice, which he who saw
Th' Apocalyps, heard cry in Heaven aloud,
Then when the Dragon, put to second rout,
Came furious down to be reveng'd on men,
Wo to the inhabitants on Earth! that now,
While time was, our first-Parents had bin warnd
The coming of thir secret foe, and scap'd
Haply so scap'd his mortal snare;"
There is a very strong Apocalyptic thread running in the entire account of the war in Heaven. The bestial imagery that stalks Satan throughout the poem obliges one to remember the beasts in the Demonic Trinity of The Apocalypse.The brief account of the war in the Apocalypse appears to be set in the future. Milton deliberately transferred it to the remote past, even before the foundation of the world and the outset of history. But the war is fraught with allusions to the Future: first, Israel's redemption from Egypt and the annihilation of the Pharaoh's might; secondly the redemption of the world by Christ and his conquest of Death and thirdly the Second Advent, intimated through the conduct of the Son of God when 'full of wrath bent on his Enemies' he adopts the style appropriate to the 'wrath of the Lamb' detailed in the Apocalypse.


   The principal divisions of the Book of Revelation are the following:
  1. Prologue (1:13)
  2. Letters to the Churches of Asia (1:43:22)
  3. God and the Lamb in Heaven (4:15:14)
  4. The Seven Seals, Trumpets, and Plagues, with Interludes (6:116:21)
  5. The Punishment of Babylon and the Destruction of Pagan Nations (17:120:15)
  6. The New Creation (21:122:5)
  7. Epilogue (22:621)
      A reader may conjecture that Paradise Lost is naturally divisible into the seven visions evidently central to The Apocalypse and therefore assume that The Apocalypse provided the model for Milton's Paradise Lost. But while the Apocalypse tells us that the shape of Heaven is a cube but in Paradise Lost the shape of Heaven is neither square nor round but 'undetermind square or round'. Milton also went out of his way to oppose the relentless emphasis of the Apocalypse on implacable retribution by introducing into all the visions of Paradise Lost a decisive and recurrent element of lenity. While Tradition says that Christ is to appear as  Judge, Milton says that Christ is to be as much judge as mediator and saviour. The vision of the future that Michael unfolds before the stricken Adam discloses that the world shall go on to "To good malignant, to bad men benigne, Under her own weight groaning". The terminal point of history in the epic is not preceded by the massive and devastating calamities set forth in the Apocalypse. Not vengeance but the fulfillment of God's promises and the beatific vision beyond history is what Milton's conclusion. It is the prospect of the Second Advent when the Son of God is to
                                                           " ....raise
From the conflagrant mass, purg'd and refin'd,
New Heav'ns, new Earth, Ages of endless date
Founded in righteousness and peace and love 
To bring forth fruits Joy and eternal Bliss."

                                                                    - Book XII, Paradise Lost.








The four horsemen of The Apocalypse. The Last Judgement.


                                                     Michael's prophecy of Crucifixtion in Paradise Lost.

Although The Book of Revelation provided a model for Milton's Paradise Lost , the underlying essence of the two books are very different despite the recurrent allusions. 



Bibliography:
- Apocalypse: The Morphology of a Genre, Semeia.
- Faerie Queen by Edmund Spenser.
-The New Testament.
-The Key of the Revelation, translated by Richard More.
- Paradise Lost by John Milton.