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Milton's Paradise Lost books 1 and 4

Last reviewed: October 24, 2011 ~3 min read

Milton Outline

Paradise Lost can be read on the surface as a purely religious parable, and hold a great deal of literary value as such

Solely reading the text for its religious implications means the reader is missing out on much of Milton's intentions and other possible interpretations, however.

Certain indicators in the first four "books" of the poem hint that a more psychological reading of the text, where God and Satan are two opposing inner voices in the mind or soul of man, is more in keeping with Milton's intent

The Frame

Milton begins his lengthy poem with a description of what he's going to do and then calling for assistance in helping him accomplish, which makes a more psychological reading likely for two reasons

First, the fact that Milton openly exposes himself as the poet, rather than simply diving into the story of the poem, makes Man rather than either God or Satan central to the story, and makes it clear that this is where the conflict occurs

C. Second, Milton calls on the Holy Spirit to enter him and be his muse, which is explicitly making God an inner voice or internal presence, not an external character

III. The Debate

A. Satan's decision-making process in the second book of Paradise Lost also indicates a more internal conflict than an external one

B. There are different counsels that war for Satan's attention and advocate different plans of action, creating an opposition of values and ideas in Satan's mind that he must work to resolve before a choice can be made and the action can move forward

C. This is similar to the oppositional voices of conscience and desire that occur in man's mind, and that is further represented by the God/Satan juxtaposition in the poem

IV. The Conflict

A. In Book Four of the poem, Satan's conflict with God becomes direct and physical when he is discovered by Gabriel, but even here there is a greater sense of internal struggle

B. Satan has doubts regarding his actions and even the possibility of redemption, and he even becomes self-righteously angry when Gabriel accuses him of wrongdoing without proof -- Satan is still a creature that desires good, in some

ways, but it is being denied to him

C. Similarly, the voices of temptation and desire in humans are not pure evil, but they are in conflict with man's better nature (represented by God)

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PaperDue. (2011). Milton's Paradise Lost books 1 and 4. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/milton-outline-paradise-lost-can-46830

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