“Kings for such a Tomb would wish to die”: Milton’s Monument of Words
Rohitashwa
Sarkar,
PGI,
Roll No: 37.
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.
No comments:
Post a Comment