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    11 November 2012

    Paradise Lost as an Epic

    The Oxford English Dictionary defines "cosmos" as "the world or universe as an

    ordered and harmonious system," from the Greek, "kosmos," referring to an orderedand/or ornamental thing. Though Pythagoras is credited with first using this term to

    describe the Universe, probably since he is also the one most commonly cited for ideas of

    harmony and the Musica Mundana, cosmos is generally a contrast to "chaos"-"the first

    state of the universe." In explaining the theology and cosmology of Paradise Lost, Miltonwrites, "the heavens and earth/ Rose out of Chaos," describing the move from the

    formless mass to the ordered whole. (I:9-10) As much as this delineates the structure of

    the world, however, its culmination seems to appear in the Spirit, as Milton has

    conceived it-the free, reasoning, integrated Consciousness. Though many have found ahero in the English epic from its dramatis personae-from Adam to Satan to God/Son

    himself-the most encompassing heroism seems that of Milton himself, as a manifestationof this most supreme of creations: the wholesome mind.

    An instance in which Milton's views on the sovereignty of the Spirit appear in someof the conversations of the Arch Fiend himself with his fellows-which is quite ironic,

    considering that the story is an extrapolation upon Christian Scripture. One of Satan's

    "compeers" says, during a discussion after their exile from Heaven:

    Too well I see and rue the dire event

    That, with sad overthrow and foul defeat,

    Hath lost us Heaven, and all this mighty host

    In horrible destruction laid thus low,

    As far as Gods and heavenly Essences

    Can perish: for the mind and spirit remains

    Invincible, and vigour soon returns,

    Though all our glory extinct, and happy state

    Here swallowed up in endless misery (I:135-140).

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    The invincibility of "the mind and spirit" is something which even the foes of God

    understand. Though the fallen angels corrupt their "heavenly Essences" with disobedience

    and revolt, they still have a keen understanding of the powers of perception, of personalreaction to one's environment-"for neither do the Spirits damned/ Lose all their virtue"

    (2:482-483). Satan boldly speaks to his fellows, asking

    What though the field be lost?

    All is not lost-the unconquerable will . . .

    And courage never to submit or yield (I:105-108).

    Like a true hero, Satan refers to conquest and courage, a response to the tyranny he and

    his cohorts have received from the hand of God. It is this attitude-of adventurous

    righteousness-which many cite as sufficient to show the fallen Archangel to be the hero ofthe work. However, working within the confines of the Biblical account, Milton could not

    reasonably-even if he wished-display Satan as the outright protagonist and epic hero.Therefore, it can only be his qualities of trust in the Spirit, in his own Consciousness as a

    fortress against the harms surrounding him, that can represent the truly heroic aspect.

    Satan is a deeply solipsistic character, well aware of the world and his situation in

    it. Though he becomes quite fatalistic at times and denies possibilities of recovery from

    his downfall, essentially, he knows that the loss of Heaven as a place is always

    permanent:

    Infernal world! and thou, profoundest Hell,

    Receive thy new possessor-one who brings

    A mind not to be changed by place or time.

    The mind is its own place, and in itself

    Can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.

    What matter where, if I be still the same

    . . . Here at least/ We shall be free . . .

    we may reign secure; and, in my choice,

    To reign is worth ambition, though in Hell:

    Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven. (I:251-263)

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    Whatever the reason for their revolt, when Satan and his armies are defeated by

    the Son, they lose their aspiration, revert to the disintegrated empty air from which they

    were made: "Exhausted, spiritless, afflicted, fallen" (6:852). In contrast, though Adam andEve also fall like the Archangel, the difference between Satan and Man is their different

    choices in the application of their autonomy and spiritual sovereignty, especially after

    acting against God. Milton explains in his argument for Book X:

    Adam more and more perceiving his fall'n condition heavily bewailes, rejects

    the condolement of Eve; she persists and at length appeases him: then to evade

    the Curse likely to fall on thir Ofspring, proposes to Adam violent wayes,

    which he approves not, but conceiving better hope, puts her in mind of the late

    Promise made them.

    The dividing line between Man and Satan is demonstrated in Milton's summary

    with his juxtaposition of the proposal of "violent wayes" with "better hope . . . in mind of

    the late Promise made them." Instead of desperate, destructive means, like Satan and his

    minions, Adam and Eve are thus able to remain hopeful and humble.

    Adam even compares himself to the fallen Archangel, calling himself "miserable/

    Beyond all past example and future;/ To Satan only like both crime and doom" (X:820-822). However, the pivotal difference comes later, when the actual consideration of

    possible choices-freedom-relents to create in Man hope, as opposed to Satan, who remains

    in "desperate revenge." An important concept here is that of Predestination, with whichMilton himself vehemently disagreed, a strong proponent of free will and its

    acknowledgment. One of the devils in Pandemonium, Belial, describes Satan's

    justifications for rebellion: "we are decreed,/ Reserved, and destined to eternal woe"

    (II:160-161). But God charges this notion with sophistry, saying that

    Foreknowledge had no influence on their fault . . .

    So without least impulse or shadow of fate,

    Or aught by me immutably foreseen,

    They trespass, authors to themselves in all

    . . . I form'd them free . . . Their nature . . . ordain'd

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    Their freedom: they themselves ordain'd their fall (III:118-128).

    Satan later becomes conscious of his freedom, cursing himself who "Chose freelywhat [he] now so justly rues," but he cannot take this further to repentance and pardon, for

    which "there [is] no place/ Left . . .but by submission" (X:70, 79-81). This he cannot

    embrace because of his "disdain [for God] and dread of shame/ Among the Spiritsbeneath" (X:82-83). All of this is due to the utter perplexity and discord of Satan's

    situation; Belial sums this up in a bitter paradox: "our final hope/ Is flat despair" (II:142-

    143).

    The difference between Satan and Man emerges in the unfolding of the plot.

    Instead of taking Satan's view of utter despair and want of death and eternal

    unconsciousness, Adam and Eve decide to take a submissive place in God's plan.

    Diametrically opposed to Satan's vengeful schemes to seek war of "the offended Deity,"Man seeks Peace-submitting to the Almighty because he is almighty, hoping for "The

    Spirit of God, promised alike and given/ To all believers" (XII:519-520). Repentance andsupplication are things which Satan-in his desperation-could never accomplish. Though

    the Arch Fiend was strong of Spirit, it was crushed in his attempts to act against Divine

    Will, destroyed by the "Spirit and Might" given to the Son by God himself.

    Whether or not we take a "side" in determining the true victor(s)-Satan and his

    army in their spiritual "martyrdom" or Adam & Eve in their submission or the Son in his

    military conquest-Milton's insistence on the inner state as the final determinant of one'sposition is apparent throughout. Though Satan loses the battle, he is inwardly convinced of

    his own inability to do otherwise in the face of such extreme circumstances as his.

    Additionally, though Adam & Eve know that Paradise is lost as a place, their hope is toreach it as a state of mind, to reside there in Spirit. And the Son-though obviously the

    champion of the battle-was decreed to be victorious by the Almighty, and did not

    necessarily experience the sort of spiritual change or adventure like the other characters.

    This ambiguity by Milton-of not making the hero of his work apparent-is too

    pervasive to have been unintentional. Rather, it seems that Milton wishes to share his own

    "heroism" in composing such an epic to his culture-both English and Christian-by takingthe reader on a trip through the Consciousness of each of his constructed characters,

    exploring the different facets of freedom and responsibility. In fact, in his role as narrator,

    Milton says to the Son:

    Thee I re-visit now with bolder wing,

    Escap'd the Stygian pool, though long detain'd

    In that obscure sojourn, while in my flight

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    Through utter and through middle darkness borne

    . . . I sung of Chaos and eternal Night;

    Taught by the heavenly Muse to venture down

    The dark descent, and up to re-ascend (3:13-20).

    Milton describes his allegorical trek through the heavens and the earth-an

    "obscure sojourn" quite similar to that of Aeneas or Odysseus or Achilles. Though he is

    blinded physically, Milton explains-as narrator-that he, like other blind prophets, isgranted other boons to recompense for his loss:

    with the year . . . Seasons return; but not to me returns

    Day . . . So much the rather thou, celestial Light,

    Shine inward, and the mind through all her powers

    Irradiate; there plant eyes . . . that I may see and tell

    Of things invisible to mortal sight. (3:40-55)

    It is this "celestial Light" which allows Milton to see things which others cannot,

    which allows him to be like "Thamyris . . . Maeonides . . . Tiresias, and Phineus" (3:35-36).

    Though many arguments and counter-arguments can be made as to who of thefigures in Paradise Lost is its hero, as a whole, it is the Spirit, the inward wholesomeness,

    intellectual autonomy, and strength of character of the individual which appears as the

    most wide-ranging "epic virtue" in the work, displayed by many of the characters.

    Essentially, in this piece, Milton takes the entire concept of an epic and transforms it intoan engaging experience, one which is not at all an attempt at flattery and sycophantic

    pandering to his own culture and beliefs, but rather, one which takes the reader's own

    Spirit to task. Centuries before Milton, Thomas Aquinas wrote in his Summa Theologica:"In the very gift of sanctifying grace, it is the Holy Spirit whom one possesses, and who

    dwells in man." Milton's epic awakens anyone who participates in this mental voyage

    from whatever depths of gloom he may reside, transforming the shapeless darknesstherein into the integrated Consciousness, the illuminated Spirit, which formed the Son,

    but lives in us all:

    Hail, holy Light, offspring of Heaven firstborn

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    . . . Before the Heavens thou wert . . .

    Won from the void and formless infinite (3:1-12).