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Paradise Lost Milton

Paradise Lost: Milton’s Approach To Lust, Sex, And Violence Essay, Research Paper


Paradise Lost: Milton’s Approach To Lust, Sex, and Violence


There is no reason to apply modern theories to Milton if we do not care whether


Milton remains alive. However, if we wish him to be more than a historical


artifact, we must do more than just study him against the background of his time.


We must reinterpret him in light of the germane thought of our own age.


-James Driscoll


The Unfolding God Of Jung and Milton


Images and allusions to sex and death are intermingled throughout John Milton’s


Paradise Lost . The character of Satan serves as not only an embodiment of


death and sin, but also insatiated sexual lust. The combination of sex and lust


has significant philosophical implications, especially in relation to themes of


creation, destruction, and the nature of existence. Milton, in Paradise Lost,


establishes that with sex, as with religion, he is of no particular hierarchical


establishment. However, Milton does not want to be confused with the


stereotypical puritan. Milton the poet, seems to celebrate the ideal of sex; yet,


he deplores concupiscence and warns against the evils of lust, insisting lust


leads to sin, violence and death.


From the beginning, Satan, like fallen humanity, not only blames others; but


also makes comic and grandiose reasons for his evil behavior. Yet, despite his


reasoning to seek revenge against God, “his true motivation for escaping from


hell and perverting paradise is, at least partly, something more basic: Satan


needs sex” (Daniel 26).


In the opening books of the poem, Satan is cast into a fiery hell that is not


only is miserable, but devoid of sex. As Satan describes when he has escaped to


Eden, in hell: “neigh joy nor love, but fierce desire, / Among our other


torments not the least, / Still unfulfilled with pain of longing pine” (Book IV,


509-11). The phallic implications of “pain of longing pine” is quite clear. In


this metaphor, Milton expresses that sex itself is not a sin; to be without it


is a “hellish” punishment. However, Milton rejects the morality of lusting for


sex, equating it with: death, sin, violence and Satan. Milton elucidates the


lustful desires of Satan throughout the first few books. For example, liquid, a


common symbol of femininity is depicted seven times in the first two books in


the form of a “lake” (Daniel 26). The “lake” serves as a metaphor to the waters


of the womb. Further metaphors to female anatomy and the womb are made through


references of hell as a “pit” (Book I, 91). Therefore, Satan’s fall into hell


is an allusion to being thrust back into the womb(hell) where Satan and his


rebels are sexually inhibited. As Daniels states, “These images suggest that


Satan has been, in regard to the perfect sex that he enjoyed in Heaven,


emasculated, rendered impotent but burning, in a feminine, inactive in hell.”


(27). Similarly, Frank Kermode comments, “Milton boldly hints that the fallen


angel [Satan] is sexually deprived . . . the price of warring against


omnipotence is impotence (114). This is exemplified in book II, when Milton


writes, ” Beyond his potent arm, to live exempt/ From Heaven’s high jurisdiction,


in a new league / Banded against his throne, but to remain. In strictest


bondage” (318-321).


Furthermore, Satan’s sexual despair is intensified by the very notion that it


was the Son of God, who caused his malady. As Satan says, he and his “associates


and copartners” (Book I, 265) were “transfix[ed]” by the Son’s “Thunderbolts”


(Book I. 328-329) to a “fiery Couch” (Book I, 377). Thus, Satan blames his


sexual despair on the Son of God, who is his arch-rival for the favor of God. In


Satan’s eyes, it is “as if it were a sexual assault by the triumphant


Son.”(Daniels 27).


Satan lusts for sex, as does his rebels; sexual tensions saturate the images in


the first few books. To elucidate, Satan’s consult begins amidst: a plethora of


phallic symbols: standards, staffs, ensigns, “a Forest huge of spears,” pipes,


flutes, and, amidst the uproar there is the “painful steps over the burnt soil”


of phallic feet . (Daniel, 30).


Even when Satan views his consult of demons, the images used by Milton conjure


images of a potential erection: “his heart / Distends with pride, and hardening


in his strength ” (Book II, 571-573), Satan “stood like a Tower” (Book II, 591).


Furthermore, when Satan arrives at the walls of Eden, the sexual imagery


continues, Eden is seen as mons Veneris: “a rural mound, the champaign head /


Of a steep wilderness, whose hairy sides / With thicket overgrown, grotesque and


wild, / Access denied” (Book Iv. 134-37).


In Paradise Lost, Milton equates lust with evil, Satan is seen as a foil to


Christ, God’s good son, and references are made to Christ being: “by merit more


than birthright Son of God, / Found worthiest to be so by being good, / Love


hath abounded more than glory abounds;” (Book III, 309-312). Furthermore,


although Eve is seduced by Satan, it is her lust for the fruit from the Tree of


Knowledge that causes her downfall.


However, unlike lust, sex itself is not presented in Paradise Lost as impure.


Milton takes a different attitude towards sex than what would be expected of the


doctrines of the time. He passes no moral judgment in Paradise Lost that sex


itself may or may not be engaged solely to procreate. For Milton, “chastity is


rather `purity of life’, the aggregate of `the duties that touch the purities of


ones person’. Her [chastity] proper companions are `modestie and temperance’,


and if she appears at all as abstinence it is only in the sense of `abstaining


from straggling lusts and al impurity’”(Patrides, 166). In Eden, before the fall,


sex is perfect, as Adam and Eve are sinless nor do they feel guilt about


themselves. In fact, it is when Adam and Eve must engage in sex to procreate


that guilty feelings arise: “After the fall, both Adam and Eve agonize that the


devil has devastated their sex lives by turning the personal pleasure of sex


into the source of a race of beings doomed to suffer” (Daniels 36). Before the


fall, Satan while observing Adam and Eve in Heaven becomes hateful and jealous


at the sight of this universal and harmonious fornication, and writhes with


hateful envy at the memory of his state in Heaven: “I hate thy beams /That bring


to my remembrance from what state / I fell”(Book IV, 37-39). Before the fall,


Adam and Eve are amorous and like God, delight in love. As Patrides states, “No


Protestant commentator ever denied that Adam and Eve `knew’ each other before


the Fall, and neither does Milton” (167). Milton asserts outside of Paradise


Lost that love is “as a fire sent from Heaven to be ever kept alive upon the


altar of our hearts, be the first principle of all godly and vertous [sic]


actions in men ” (Patrides, 168) . Most renaissance writers regard love as a


positive passion. But they also believed that if love is cut off from its true


source, which is God, it grows perverted, immoderate and irrational. Burton,


wrote, “if it rage . . . it is no more love but a burning lust, a disease,


Phrensie[sic], Madness, Hell.”(440) and according to Peter Sterry “All lust is


Love degenerated, Love corrupted” (Patrides, 170). In Eden, before the fall Adam


and Eve are guiltless of “dishonest shame / Of Nature’s works, honor


dishonorable, / Sin bred “(Book Iv, 313-315) and are “god like erect, with


native Honor clad / In naked Majesty” (Book IV, 289-90). This stands also as a


phallic metaphor to contrast Satan’s impotence. He is a fallen angel, not “God-


like” as is Adam, having cut himself off from God, his love has been corrupted


and turned into a madness. Through Raphael, Milton expresses a concern for


sexual gratification without love as reducing man to the level of animals:


if the sense of touch whereby mankind


Is propagated seem such dear delight


Beyond all other, think the same voutsafed


To Cattle and each Beast


(Book VIII, 579-82)


The pain caused by Satan’s sexual frustration and lust is incalculable, as he


whines:


Sight hateful, sight tormenting! thus these two


Imparadised in one another’s arms


The happier Eden shall enjoy their fill


Of bliss, while I to Hell am thrust,


Where neither joy nor love, but fierce desire,


(Book IV, 505-509)


The above passage contains several sexual connotations; Eden provides a


blissful “fill” while Satan is “thrust” into hell, devoid of joy or love.


Satan’s building lustful hate becomes perverted into thoughts of forceful rape.


God, seeing Satan winging his way to

earth, has sent angels Ithuriel and Zephon,


to prevent Satan from overwhelming the humans against their will(Book IV, 800-


900). Through Satan’s plot against humanity, the lust/love relationship becomes


elucidated further when compared to biblical references. James I:15 states:


“That when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin; and sin, when it is


finished bringeth forth death”. Milton painstakingly reiterates this ideology


throughout Paradise Lost.


By the end of Paradise Lost, lust brings forth death. Most readers recognize the


erotic nature of Satan’s encounter with eve. The tasting of the forbidden fruit


by Eve is based on a lust created by Satan as the serpent. Eve returns to Adam


“defaced”, “deflowered” and “now to Death devote” (Book IX, 901). When Satan


ruined Eve, he knew that Adam would soon follow. Satan realizes the


consequences of his actions; in agony of lust and despair he needs sex so badly


he is willing to murder Adam and Eve, for in order to sate his lust, the humans


must die, and consequently so must all humans.


After the fall, Eve is distraught as she contemplates abstaining from having


sex in order to thwart death. She states to risk bringing children into “this


cursed world” is unconscionable (Book X, 981-91). From here, the theme of sex


and lust moves towards lust and violence. As Daniels writes: “Milton subtly


modulates the theme of lust and death to one of lust and violence, a theme that


already has been heard in the catalog of devils as well as in the sexual


dimension of the war and Heaven” (44).


According to Milton, lust gives rise to warfare, when mankind is not busy:


“marrying or prostituting , as befell, /Rape or Adultery, where passing fair /


Allured them” (Book XII, 716-18), it wars: “With cruel Tournament the Squadrons


join; / Where cattle pastured late, now scattered lies / With Carcasses and Arms


the ensanguined Field / Deserted. Others to a city strong / Lay siege ” (Book XI,


652-55). Furthermore, he describes “just men they seemed, and all their study


bent / To worship God aright, and know his works / Not hid, nor things last


which might preserve / Freedom and peace to men” (Book XI, 577-580). Even these


“just men” succomb to lust:


They on the plain


Long had not walked, when from the tents behold


A bevy of fair women, richly gay


In gems and wanton dress; to the harp they sung


Soft amorous ditties, and in dance came on:


The men, through grave, eyed them, and let their eyes


Rove without rein, till in the amorous net


Fast Caught?


(Book XI, 580-587)


These “just men” become corrupted by their lust for these women and their


“perverted love” brings forth violence, and eventually their death:


Bred only and completed to the taste


Of lustful appetence, to sing, to dance


to dress and troll the tongue, and roll the eye.


To these that sober race of men, whose lives


Religious titled them the Sons of God,


Shall yield up all their virtue, all the fame


Ignobly, to the trains and to the smiles


Of these fair atheists” (Book XI, 618-625)


Thus, reiterating the renaissance and Milton’s notion that love cannot by cut


off from its true source, which is God; otherwise, it develops perverted lust.


The punishment for the ensuing spread of lust is the cataclysm of universal


death by the flooding of the earth; also death on a less universal scale caused


by the violence of “slaughter and gigantic deeds” (Book XI, 659) lust creates:


great conquerors


Patrons of Mankind, Gods, and Sons of Gods,


Destroyers rightlier called and Plagues of men


(Book XI, 695-697)


In reviewing Milton’s lethal nature of lust, it would be helpful to also examine


another work, Samson Agonsistes, in comparison to Paradise Lost. In Samson


Agonistes, Samson like the “just men” in Paradise Lost also becomes lost in lust


and violence and fears the consequence of death: “My race of glory run, and race


of shame, . And I shall shortly be with them that rest.” (Samson, 597-598). As


Daniels states, “Samson is ruined not so much because he is garrulous but


because he is violent and licentious”(77).


Milton viewed violence as another guise of a perverse satanic energy. However,


it may be argued as to weather or not Milton is a pacifist. James A. Freeman, in


Milton and the Martial Muse maintains Milton was anti-violence/war to the point


of pacifism. According to Freemen, Milton in Paradise Lost gives to the devil


the traditional warrior ethos and by doing so undoubtedly, “startled early


readers who were conditioned to respect military men? By identifying demonic


[and/or lustful] actions as martial, Milton attacks the `double speak’ of his


time(220-221)?war is the utmost that vice [evil] promises to her followers” (45).


In contrast, Michael Lieb, in Poetics of the Holy: A reading Paradise Lost of,


argues:


Peace was valued by Milton as much as anyone in the Renaissance, and yet this


love of peace and detestation of war should not blind one to the extent to which


Milton was imbued with the fervor of what he considered to be a just war


undertaken in a righteous cause (265-266).


Based on Paradise Lost alone, it would appear that Milton regards lust and


violence as two related issues. It is lust that gives rise to violence and


hatred. Even today, debate rages over the nature of violence. Often discussed is


the issue of whether the word denotes only physical harm or whether certain


kinds of emotional or psychological harm constitute violence. In Paradise Lost,


violence is linked with satanic energy and lust which alienates one from God.


Milton connects violence with lust in some of his early works as well; in his


mask Comus, the character of Comus and his crew, are compared with “stabled


wolves or tigers at their prey” (534) who surprise their victims with “unjust


force” (590) and with “the sons of Vulcan” who “fierce sign of battle make, and


menace high” with “brandished blade”(651-56). As well, sexual connotations are


very evident in Comus; Comus himself experiences the same sexual despair and


frustration of Satan in Paradise Lost. This lust creates a hell for Comus


similar to that depicted in Paradise Lost:


Of midnight torches burns; mysterious dame,


that never art called but when the dragon womb


Of stygian darkness spets her thickest gloom,


And makes one blot of all the air


(130-133)


Furthermore, as Comus lusts after the lady in the mask, this lust turns to


thoughts of violence. In the mask, the two brothers debate the possibility that


Comus and his crew could conceive of trying to rape her. The second brother


states: “the rash hand of blood Incontinence” (397) will not allow “a single


helpless maiden pass /Uninjured” (402-403).


Without a doubt, it may be argued that Milton may or may not agree with a “just


holy war”, but he does believe that lust and excess will lead to violence. Such


violence created by lust, alienates man from God and is therefore, sinful.


In conclusion, Milton is consistent in his approach to sex, lust, violence and


death throughout Paradise Lost and many of his other works. The downfall of


humankind was caused by lust for the forbidden fruit, as was Satan’s motive for


revenge. Milton explicitly points out that lust leads to violence and alienates


man from God. The punishment according to Milton is justly, death. Throughout


Paradise Lost, Milton emphasis moderation, and love that becomes an obsession,


becomes lust. In Milton’s eyes lust is very dangerous and leads to violence and


death of mankind. Like other writers of his time, Milton warns of the


consequences of “falling” into lust as removing oneself from Godhead.


WORKS CITED


Daniel, Clay. Death in Milton’s Poetry. (London: Ass. Univ. Press, 1994)


Freeman, James A. Milton and the Martial Muse: Paradise Lost and the European


Traditions of War. (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1980)


Kermode, Frank. Ed. “Adam Unparadised” in The Living Milton: Essays by Various


Hands (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1960)


Lieb, Michael. Poetics of the Holy: A Reading of Paradise Lost. (Chapel Hill:


University of North Carolina Press, 1981)


Milton, John. Comus in The Portable Milton. Editor Douglas Bush (New York:


Viking Press, 1977)


—-, Paradise Lost in The Portable Milton. Editor Douglas Bush (New York:


Viking Press, 1977)


—-, Samson Agonistes in The Portable Milton. Editor Douglas Bush (New York:


Viking Press, 1977)


Patrides, C.A. Milton and The Christian Tradition. (Oxford: Clarendon Press,


1966)


37a

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