Milton's Wisdom: Nature and Scripture in Paradise LostMilton's Wisdom examines the poet's use of the traditional notion that the eternal wisdom of God expressed itself in the "books" of nature and Scripture. It is the first study to draw attention to Milton's extensive use of biblical wisdom literature in his dramatization of Adam and Eve's education, their fall, and their reconciliation with one another and with God. The author looks at the ways theological and hence epistemological questions converge on and are generated by Adam's, Eve's, and Satan's responses to the world they see around them and to the words God and his emissaries speak to them. Reichert argues that the nature/Scripture dichotomy informs the symmetrical structure of the twelve books of Milton's epic. Milton's Wisdom challenges previous readings that have tried to ally Milton with the Puritans' strict theology of the word. Reichert has shifted our attention away from literary and historical theory and back to the experience of the poem as a whole. |
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Page 119
The song joins the unfallen Eve , as its singer , in sympathetic union with the blind and fallen poet , 21 and this union is strengthened by the congruence between Eve's phrasings and the phrasings of the narrator's description of the ...
The song joins the unfallen Eve , as its singer , in sympathetic union with the blind and fallen poet , 21 and this union is strengthened by the congruence between Eve's phrasings and the phrasings of the narrator's description of the ...
Page 122
The first , in harmony with Eve's love song , presents a changing scene , catching the gradual coming on of night , the movement from twilight , through the appearance of the evening star , through the moon's regal progress rising ...
The first , in harmony with Eve's love song , presents a changing scene , catching the gradual coming on of night , the movement from twilight , through the appearance of the evening star , through the moon's regal progress rising ...
Page 283
But the phrase recalls the “ he plucked , he tasted ” of Eve's dream , and anticipates the serpent's “ to pluck and eat my fill / I spared not , ” and the narrator's description of Eve's act : “ she plucked , she eat .
But the phrase recalls the “ he plucked , he tasted ” of Eve's dream , and anticipates the serpent's “ to pluck and eat my fill / I spared not , ” and the narrator's description of Eve's act : “ she plucked , she eat .
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Paradise Lost | 51 |
Meditating on the Creatures Part | 69 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Adam and Eve Adam's angels answer appears beauty become beginning Book bring calls chapter conversation course created creation creatures death describes desire divine earth effect emphasis Eve's evil expressed eyes face fact fair faith Fall fallen Father fear feel follow fruit given gives God's grace hand happy hath hear heard heart heaven heavenly human knowledge leave light lines live look Lord meaning Michael Milton mind morning move nature once opening Paradise Lost passage perhaps phrase poem poet praise prayer present providence question Raphael reader reason receive reference Satan says Scripture seems seen sense sight speak speech spirit story suggest sweet tells thee things thou thought tree turn understanding University Press unto voice wisdom wonder words
References to this book
All in All: Unity, Diversity, and the Miltonic Perspective Charles W. Durham,Kristin A. Pruitt Limited preview - 1999 |