Milton
devoted to form and coherence which separates him from the great romantic. This
gives separated him from the great romantics. This gives a delicacy and granite
to the beauty if his verse. Like Ben Jonson he favoured the Hellenic or
classical conventions in performance to the happy-go-lucky methods of
romanticism. But like Jonson he did not follow scholarship to freeze his
creative imagination. This Hellenic quality is exhibited to the best on the early
poems—“A’Allegro”, La Penseloso,” Comus” and “Lycidas”. These poems have all
the youthful charms and freshness and show off the lighter and more fanciful
side of Milton’s genius.
In his address to Melancholy, Milton says,” come,
Pensivenun, devout and pure,” there is also a stateliness of manners added to
the sense of beauty which makes Milton’s poetry highly dignified, unsurpassed
and unequalled.
Paradise
lost is considered the most Hebraic of great English poems. Milton codifies and
concentrated all his puritan meditations on the Bible. He points the visions
received from the Bible. He freely interprets the scripture but with utmost
faith. He believes in the authenticity of the bible and its sacredness. Milton
projects himself his feelings, knowledge and aspirations into the characters of
the epic, both the primitive human creatures and the superhuman beings whether
heavenly or hell or inferno. There s a complicit between his faith and his
nature which shows sympathy in spite of the poet’s intentions.
The
moral thesis of Genesis is submission to the Almighty which makes disobedience
on to sin. In spite of himself Milton was in deep sympathy with Satan that
great rebel of Heaven and the Enemy of God. It is into Satan that Milton has
most of himself, his pride and temperament. Milton as a sincere believer wanted
to justify the ways to God to man.
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