Subject: doctorlit reviews Paradise Lost
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Posted on: 2019-07-04 15:00:00 UTC

We of the internet generation(s) like to think we invented fanfiction, but of course there’s really nothing new under the sun. John Milton knew how to look at an existing text and expand on the characters and events with new insights and developments, way back in 1667.

Spoilers for . . . Well. For the Bible and Paradise Lost. Yep.

So.

Man, this is so different from anything I’ve written about before. It doesn’t help that I actually finished it a couple of weeks ago, but I’ve been too busy covering a coworker’s vacation to be able to sit down and write this. It was actually quite a slog to read through, despite technically being a poem, and therefore having a decent amount of blank space on each page. Me being me, however, I of course had to read every footnote and endnote, which meant a lot of breaking up my train of thought and flipping back and forth through pages. Also, lots of old-timey words and phrases.

I found Satan to be a let-down, honestly. (Is that weird to say? I feel like that’s weird to say.) Everything I heard about PL before I sat down and read it made Stan out to be this massive figurehead of rebellion and resistance. And boy, did he turn out be . . . a pathetic, ineffectual loser. The boy may be able to talk himself up to his fallen angel pals, and I won’t deny the fight scene between Satan and Death was pretty dang cool. But the further he gets from Hell, the lamer and more boring he gets. Get him up against God or His angels, and it’s curb stomp city. He couldn’t even infiltrate Eden without the scouting angels getting suspicious. Once his plans to directly mess with God and Heaven are thwarted, he goes full-blown schoolyard bully, and starts focusing his evil on the much weaker beings of creation, Adam and Eve and that poor Serpent. Again, before reading, I had heard the argument that Satan is really the protagonist and God the villain, but I just didn’t see it. Satan barely appears in the last third of the text.

Yeah, I like snakes, I like the capital-s Serpent. PL gets kind of ambiguous between when it’s referring to Satan or the Serpent around that famous scene. I like to think Milton wasn’t hating on snakes for what one snake did while possessed, but snakes have been maligned in human history for so long, it’s hard to say. Folks, it’s okay be afraid of snek, but no blame snek for Original Sin.

Even with the gulf of language evolution between us, I feel like Milton did a really excellent job of contrasting the pre-fall and post-fall states of Adam and Eve, as well as the change to the “garden” of Eden itself. Before the fall, Adam and Eve are simplistic and peaceful, without coming off as dull or, dare I say, “Purity Sues.” It’s only after the fall when they start exhibiting more selfish traits and feeling conflict between each other, but after seeing them so sweet and perfect for each other, it did make me feel rather sad, even though on paper it seems like they should have gotten more interesting after such a change. I also like Milton framed Eden itself not as a literal garden located somewhere on Earth, but the state of evil-lessness Earth was in before Adam and Eve fell; it’s their perception of the world that changed, not the world itself.

“So spake the seraph Abdiel, faithful found
Among the spoilers, faithful only he
Among innumerable false, unmov’d”

—doctorlit is definitely going to binge-read the entire Bible someday, just you wait

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