PRESENTATION
To start this blog is interesting to clarify the intention that surrounds its creation.
This blog was created because of the Professor Valécio Irineu Barros's request
as a requirement score corresponding to the 2nd Unit of Litetature II in the
course of English Language of the Universidade Estadual da Paraíba.
In this blog the Literature’s
students have to write a little about the life of John Milton and comment about
one specific work of him: Paradise Lost.
The aspects students are supposed to write about are:
1. Presentation/Introduction (of
the blog)
2.
Biography and works of John Milton (focusing in Paradise Lost)
3.
Paradise Lost – Context and Overview
4.
Characters and Symbols
5. Conclusion (of the blog)
Following the same schedule of course’s classes the groups formed by the
students have to post in the blog their comments according to the dates bellow:
John Milton was born in London on December 9, 1608. His parents were John Milton, Sr. and Sarah Jeffery, who lived in a prosperous neighborhood of merchants. John Milton, Sr. was a successful scrivener or copyist. He and his wife had three children who survived their early years: Anne, the oldest, followed by John and Christopher.
The elder John Milton (the father), who fostered cultural interests as a musician and composer, enrolled his son John at St. Paul’s School, probably in 1620, and employed tutors to supplement his son’s formal education. Milton was privately tutored by Thomas Young, a Scottish Presbyterian who may have influenced his gifted student in religion and politics while they maintained contact across subsequent decades.
During his early years, Milton may have heard sermons by the poet John Donne, dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral, which was within view of his school. Educated in Latin and Greek there, Milton in due course acquired proficiency in other languages, especially Italian, in which he composed some sonnets and which he spoke as proficiently as a native Italian, according to the testimony of Florentines whom he befriended during his travel abroad in 1638–39.
Milton enrolled at Christ’s College, Cambridge, in 1625, presumably to be educated for the ministry. A year later he was “rusticated,” or temporarily expelled, for a period of time because of a conflict with one of his tutors, the logician William Chappell. He was later reinstated under another tutor, Nathaniel Tovey. In 1629 Milton was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree, and in 1632 he received a Master of Arts degree. At Cambridge he composed several academic exercises called prolusions, which were presented as oratorical performances in the manner of a debate. In such exercises, students applied their learning in logic and rhetoric, among other disciplines.
In 1632, after seven years at Cambridge, Milton returned to his family home, now in Hammersmith, on the outskirts of London. Three years later, perhaps because of an outbreak of the plague, the family relocated to a more pastoral setting, Horton, in Buckinghamshire. In these two locations, Milton spent approximately six years in studious retirement, during which he read Greek and Latin authors chiefly. Without gainful employment, Milton was supported by his father during this period.
In 1638, accompanied by a manservant, Milton undertook a tour of the Continent for about 15 months, most of which he spent in Italy, primarily Rome and Florence. The Florentine academies especially appealed to Milton, and he befriended young members of the Italian literati, whose similar humanistic interests he found gratifying. While in Florence, Milton also met with Galileo, who was under virtual house arrest. The circumstances of this extraordinary meeting, whereby a young Englishman about 30 years old gained access to the aged and blind astronomer, are unknown. (Galileo would become the only contemporary whom Milton mentioned by name in Paradise Lost.) Back in England, Milton took up residence in London, not far from Bread Street, where he had been born. In his household were John and Edward Phillips—sons of his sister, Anne—whom he tutored. Upon his return he composed an elegy in Latin, “
By the time he returned to England in 1639, Milton had manifested remarkable talent as a linguist and translator and extraordinary versatility as a poet. While at St. Paul’s, as a 15-year-old student, Milton had translated Psalm 114 from the original Hebrew, a text that recounts the liberation of the Israelites from Egypt. This translation into English was a poetic paraphrase in heroic couplets (rhymed iambic pentameter), and later he translated and paraphrased the same psalm into Greek. Beginning such work early in his boyhood, he continued it into adulthood, especially from 1648 to 1653, a period when he was also composing pamphlets against the Church of England and the monarchy. Also in his early youth Milton composed letters in Latin verse and a poem in Latin
In 1628 Milton composed an occasional poem,
In this early period, Milton’s principal poems included
Milton’s most important early poems, Comus and
Having returned from abroad in 1639, Milton turned his attention from poetry to prose. In doing so, he entered the controversies surrounding the abolition of the Church of England and of the Royalist government, at times replying to, and often attacking vehemently, English and Continental polemicists who targeted him as the apologist of radical religious and political dissent. In 1641–42 Milton composed five tracts on the reformation of church government. Two of these tracts was: Of Reformation, examines the historical changes in the Church of England since its inception under King Henry VIII and criticizes the continuing resemblances between the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church, especially the hierarchy in ecclesiastical government and Reason of Church Government. Milton appears to endorse Scottish Presbyterianism as a replacement for the episcopal hierarchy of the Church of England.
Soon after these controversies, Milton became embroiled in another conflict, one in his domestic life. Having married Mary Powell in 1642, Milton was a few months afterward deserted by his wife, who returned to her family’s residence in Oxfordshire. The reason for their separation is unknown, though perhaps Mary adhered to the Royalist inclinations of her family whereas her husband was progressively anti-Royalist. Or perhaps the discrepancy in their ages—he was 34, she was 17—led to a lack of mutual understanding. During her absence of approximately three years, Milton may have been planning marriage to another woman. But after Mary’s return, she and Milton evidently overcame the causes of their estrangement. Three daughters (Anne, Mary, and Deborah) were born, but a son, John, died at age one. Milton’s wife died in 1652 after giving birth to Deborah.
During his domestic strife and after his wife’s desertion, Milton probably began to frame the arguments of four prose tracts: The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce (1643, enlarged 2nd ed. 1644), The Judgment of Martin Bucer Concerning Divorce (1644), Tetrachordon (1645), and Colasterion (1645). Whether or not his personal experience with Mary affected his views on marriage, Milton mounts a cogent, radical argument for divorce, an argument informed by the concepts of personal liberty and individual volition, the latter being instrumental in maintaining or ending a marriage. For Milton, marriage depends on the compatibility of the partners, and to maintain a marriage that is without mutual love and sympathy violates one’s personal liberty.
About the time that the first and second editions of The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce appeared, Milton published Of Education (1644). In line with the ideal of the Renaissance gentleman, Milton outlines a curriculum emphasizing the Greek and Latin languages not merely in and of themselves but as the means to learn directly the wisdom of Classical antiquity in literature, philosophy, and politics.
The most renowned tract by Milton is Areopagitica (1644), which opposes governmental licensing of publications or procedures of censorship. Milton contends that governments insisting on the expression of uniform beliefs are tyrannical.
Counterbalancing the antiprelatical tracts of 1641–42 are the antimonarchical polemics of 1649–55. Composed after Milton had become allied to those who sought to form an English republic, The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates (1649)—probably written before and during the trial of King Charles I though not published until after his death on January 30, 1649—urges the abolition of tyrannical kingship and the execution of tyrants. The treatise cites a range of authorities from Classical antiquity, Scripture, the Fathers of the Church, political philosophers of the early modern era, and Reformation theologians, all of whom support such extreme—but just, according to Milton—measures to punish tyrants.
Milton also mounts an eloquent, idealistic, and impassioned defense of English patriotism and liberty while he extols the leaders of the Commonwealth. The most poignant passages, however, are reserved for himself. Soon after the publication of the Latin tract Defense of the English People, Milton had become totally blind, probably from glaucoma. The Cry of the King’s Blood asserts that Milton’s blindness is God’s means of punishing him for his sins. Milton, however, replies that his blindness is a trial that has been visited upon him, an affliction that he is enduring under the approval of the Lord, who has granted him, in turn, special inner illumination, a gift that distinguishes him from others.
Three extraordinary prose works highlight the depth of Milton’s erudition and the scope of his interests:
June, 30 (Tuesday)
|
Introduction/Presentation
|
July, 2 (Thursday)
|
Biography and Works of John Milton
|
July, 7 (Thursday)
|
Paradise Lost – Context and Overview
|
July, 9 (Tuesday)
|
Characters and Symbols
|
July, 9 (Thursday)
|
Conclusion (of the blog)
|
BIOGRAPHY OF JOHN MILTON AND HIS WORKS
John Milton was born in London on December 9, 1608. His parents were John Milton, Sr. and Sarah Jeffery, who lived in a prosperous neighborhood of merchants. John Milton, Sr. was a successful scrivener or copyist. He and his wife had three children who survived their early years: Anne, the oldest, followed by John and Christopher.
The elder John Milton (the father), who fostered cultural interests as a musician and composer, enrolled his son John at St. Paul’s School, probably in 1620, and employed tutors to supplement his son’s formal education. Milton was privately tutored by Thomas Young, a Scottish Presbyterian who may have influenced his gifted student in religion and politics while they maintained contact across subsequent decades.
During his early years, Milton may have heard sermons by the poet John Donne, dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral, which was within view of his school. Educated in Latin and Greek there, Milton in due course acquired proficiency in other languages, especially Italian, in which he composed some sonnets and which he spoke as proficiently as a native Italian, according to the testimony of Florentines whom he befriended during his travel abroad in 1638–39.
Milton enrolled at Christ’s College, Cambridge, in 1625, presumably to be educated for the ministry. A year later he was “rusticated,” or temporarily expelled, for a period of time because of a conflict with one of his tutors, the logician William Chappell. He was later reinstated under another tutor, Nathaniel Tovey. In 1629 Milton was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree, and in 1632 he received a Master of Arts degree. At Cambridge he composed several academic exercises called prolusions, which were presented as oratorical performances in the manner of a debate. In such exercises, students applied their learning in logic and rhetoric, among other disciplines.
In 1632, after seven years at Cambridge, Milton returned to his family home, now in Hammersmith, on the outskirts of London. Three years later, perhaps because of an outbreak of the plague, the family relocated to a more pastoral setting, Horton, in Buckinghamshire. In these two locations, Milton spent approximately six years in studious retirement, during which he read Greek and Latin authors chiefly. Without gainful employment, Milton was supported by his father during this period.
In 1638, accompanied by a manservant, Milton undertook a tour of the Continent for about 15 months, most of which he spent in Italy, primarily Rome and Florence. The Florentine academies especially appealed to Milton, and he befriended young members of the Italian literati, whose similar humanistic interests he found gratifying. While in Florence, Milton also met with Galileo, who was under virtual house arrest. The circumstances of this extraordinary meeting, whereby a young Englishman about 30 years old gained access to the aged and blind astronomer, are unknown. (Galileo would become the only contemporary whom Milton mentioned by name in Paradise Lost.) Back in England, Milton took up residence in London, not far from Bread Street, where he had been born. In his household were John and Edward Phillips—sons of his sister, Anne—whom he tutored. Upon his return he composed an elegy in Latin, “
Epitaphium Damonis” (“Damon’s Epitaph”).
By the time he returned to England in 1639, Milton had manifested remarkable talent as a linguist and translator and extraordinary versatility as a poet. While at St. Paul’s, as a 15-year-old student, Milton had translated Psalm 114 from the original Hebrew, a text that recounts the liberation of the Israelites from Egypt. This translation into English was a poetic paraphrase in heroic couplets (rhymed iambic pentameter), and later he translated and paraphrased the same psalm into Greek. Beginning such work early in his boyhood, he continued it into adulthood, especially from 1648 to 1653, a period when he was also composing pamphlets against the Church of England and the monarchy. Also in his early youth Milton composed letters in Latin verse and a poem in Latin
In Quintum Novembris(
On the Fifth of November), which Milton composed in 1626 at Cambridge. The poem celebrates the anniversary of the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605, when Guy Fawkes was discovered preparing to detonate explosives at the opening of Parliament, an event in which King James I and his family would participate. On the event’s anniversary, university students typically composed poems that attacked Roman Catholics for their involvement in treachery of this kind. The papacy and the Catholic nations on the Continent also came under attack. Milton’s poem includes two larger themes that would later inform Paradise Lost: that the evil perpetrated by sinful humankind may be counteracted by Providence and that God will bring greater goodness out of evil.
In 1628 Milton composed an occasional poem,
On the Death of a Fair Infant Dying of a Cough,which mourns the loss of his niece Anne, the daughter of his older sister. Milton tenderly commemorates the child, who was two years old. The poem’s conceits, Classical allusions, and theological overtones emphasize that the child entered the supernal realm because the human condition, having been enlightened by her brief presence, was ill-suited to bear her any longer.
In this early period, Milton’s principal poems included
On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity,
On Shakespeare,and the so-called companion poems
L’Allegroand
Il Penseroso.Milton’s sixth elegy (
Elegia sexta), a verse letter in Latin sent to Diodati in December 1629, provides valuable insight into his conception of
On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity.
On Shakespeare,though composed in 1630, first appeared anonymously as one of the many encomiums in the Second Folio (1632) of Shakespeare’s plays. It was Milton’s first published poem in English. In the 16-line epigram Milton contends that no man-made monument is a suitable tribute to Shakespeare’s achievement. According to Milton, Shakespeare himself created the most enduring monument to befit his genius: the readers of the plays, who, transfixed with awe and wonder, become living monuments, a process renewed at each generation through the panorama of time.
L’Allegroand
Il Penseroso,written about 1631, may reflect the dialectic that informed the prolusions that Milton composed at Cambridge.
Milton’s most important early poems, Comus and
Lycidas,are major literary achievements, to the extent that his reputation as an author would have been secure by 1640 even without his later works. Comus, a dramatic entertainment, or masque, is also called A Mask; it was first published as A Maske Presented at Ludlow Castle in 1638. Late in 1637 Milton composed a pastoral elegy called
Lycidas,which commemorates the death of a fellow student at Cambridge, Edward King, who drowned while crossing the Irish Sea. Published in 1638 in Justa Edouardo King Naufrago (“Obsequies in Memory of Edward King”), a compilation of elegies by Cambridge students,
Lycidasis one of several poems in English, whereas most of the others are in Greek and Latin.
Having returned from abroad in 1639, Milton turned his attention from poetry to prose. In doing so, he entered the controversies surrounding the abolition of the Church of England and of the Royalist government, at times replying to, and often attacking vehemently, English and Continental polemicists who targeted him as the apologist of radical religious and political dissent. In 1641–42 Milton composed five tracts on the reformation of church government. Two of these tracts was: Of Reformation, examines the historical changes in the Church of England since its inception under King Henry VIII and criticizes the continuing resemblances between the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church, especially the hierarchy in ecclesiastical government and Reason of Church Government. Milton appears to endorse Scottish Presbyterianism as a replacement for the episcopal hierarchy of the Church of England.
Soon after these controversies, Milton became embroiled in another conflict, one in his domestic life. Having married Mary Powell in 1642, Milton was a few months afterward deserted by his wife, who returned to her family’s residence in Oxfordshire. The reason for their separation is unknown, though perhaps Mary adhered to the Royalist inclinations of her family whereas her husband was progressively anti-Royalist. Or perhaps the discrepancy in their ages—he was 34, she was 17—led to a lack of mutual understanding. During her absence of approximately three years, Milton may have been planning marriage to another woman. But after Mary’s return, she and Milton evidently overcame the causes of their estrangement. Three daughters (Anne, Mary, and Deborah) were born, but a son, John, died at age one. Milton’s wife died in 1652 after giving birth to Deborah.
During his domestic strife and after his wife’s desertion, Milton probably began to frame the arguments of four prose tracts: The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce (1643, enlarged 2nd ed. 1644), The Judgment of Martin Bucer Concerning Divorce (1644), Tetrachordon (1645), and Colasterion (1645). Whether or not his personal experience with Mary affected his views on marriage, Milton mounts a cogent, radical argument for divorce, an argument informed by the concepts of personal liberty and individual volition, the latter being instrumental in maintaining or ending a marriage. For Milton, marriage depends on the compatibility of the partners, and to maintain a marriage that is without mutual love and sympathy violates one’s personal liberty.
About the time that the first and second editions of The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce appeared, Milton published Of Education (1644). In line with the ideal of the Renaissance gentleman, Milton outlines a curriculum emphasizing the Greek and Latin languages not merely in and of themselves but as the means to learn directly the wisdom of Classical antiquity in literature, philosophy, and politics.
The most renowned tract by Milton is Areopagitica (1644), which opposes governmental licensing of publications or procedures of censorship. Milton contends that governments insisting on the expression of uniform beliefs are tyrannical.
Counterbalancing the antiprelatical tracts of 1641–42 are the antimonarchical polemics of 1649–55. Composed after Milton had become allied to those who sought to form an English republic, The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates (1649)—probably written before and during the trial of King Charles I though not published until after his death on January 30, 1649—urges the abolition of tyrannical kingship and the execution of tyrants. The treatise cites a range of authorities from Classical antiquity, Scripture, the Fathers of the Church, political philosophers of the early modern era, and Reformation theologians, all of whom support such extreme—but just, according to Milton—measures to punish tyrants.
Milton also mounts an eloquent, idealistic, and impassioned defense of English patriotism and liberty while he extols the leaders of the Commonwealth. The most poignant passages, however, are reserved for himself. Soon after the publication of the Latin tract Defense of the English People, Milton had become totally blind, probably from glaucoma. The Cry of the King’s Blood asserts that Milton’s blindness is God’s means of punishing him for his sins. Milton, however, replies that his blindness is a trial that has been visited upon him, an affliction that he is enduring under the approval of the Lord, who has granted him, in turn, special inner illumination, a gift that distinguishes him from others.
Three extraordinary prose works highlight the depth of Milton’s erudition and the scope of his interests:
- History of Britain (1670) an epic centring upon British history and the heroic involvement of the legendary king Arthur.
- Artis Logicae (1672; “Art of Logic”) was composed in Latin, perhaps to gain the attention also of a Continental audience. It is a textbook derived from the logic of Petrus Ramus, a 16th-century French scholar whose work reflected the impact of Renaissance humanism on the so-called medieval trivium: the arts of grammar, rhetoric, and logic.
- De Doctrina Christiana (“On Christian Doctrine”) was probably composed between 1655 and 1660, though Milton never completed it. The unfinished manuscript was discovered in the Public Record Office in London in 1823, translated from Latin into English by Charles Sumner and published in 1825 as A Treatise on Christian Doctrine. The comprehensive and systematic theology presented in this work reflects Milton’s close engagement with Scripture, from which he draws numerous proof texts in order to buttress his concepts of the Godhead and of moral theology, among others.
Abandoning his earlier plan to compose an epic on Arthur, Milton instead turned to biblical subject matter and to a Christian idea of heroism. In Paradise Lost—first
published in 10 books in 1667 and then in 12 books in 1674, at a length
of almost 11,000 lines—Milton observed but adapted a number of the
Classical epic conventions that distinguish works such as Homer’s The Iliad and The Odyssey and Virgil’s The Aeneid. Among these conventions is a focus on the elevated subjects of war, love, and heroism. Milton describes the battle between the good and evil and like many Classical epics, Paradise Lost invokes a muse, whom Milton identifies as the Judaeo-Christian Godhead.
Throughout Paradise Lost Milton uses a grand style aptly suited
to the elevated subject matter and tone. In a prefatory note, Milton
describes the poem’s metre as “English heroic verse without rhyme,” which approximates “that of Homer in Greek, and of Virgil
in Latin.” Rejecting rhyme as “the jingling sound of like endings,”
Milton prefers a measure that is not end-stopped, so that he may employ enjambment (run-on lines) with “the sense variously drawn out from one verse into another.”
Paradise Lost is ultimately not only about the downfall of Adam
and Eve but also about the clash between Satan and the Son. Many readers
have admired Satan’s splendid recklessness, if not heroism, in
confronting the Godhead. Satan’s defiance, anger, willfulness, and
resourcefulness define a character who strives never to yield. In many
ways Satan is heroic when compared to such Classical prototypes as
Achilles, Odysseus, and Aeneas and to similar protagonists in medieval and Renaissance epics. In sum, his traits reflect theirs.
Milton’s last two poems were published in one volume in 1671. Paradise Regained, a brief epic in four books, was followed by Samson Agonistes, a dramatic poem not intended for the stage. One story of the composition of Paradise Regained derives from Thomas Ellwood, a Quaker who read to the blind Milton and was tutored by him.
Paradise Regained hearkens back to the Book of Job,
whose principal character is tempted by Satan to forgo his faith in God
and to cease exercising patience and fortitude in the midst of ongoing
and ever-increasing adversity. By adapting the trials of Job and the
role of Satan as tempter and by integrating them with the accounts of Matthew and Luke of Jesus’ temptations in the wilderness, Milton dramatizes how Jesus embodies Christian heroism.
Samson Agonistes focuses on the inner workings of the mind of
the protagonist. This emphasis flies in the face of the biblical
characterization of Samson in the Book of Judges,
which celebrates his physical strength. Milton’s dramatic poem,
however, begins the story of Samson after his downfall—after he has
yielded his God-entrusted secret to Dalila (Delilah), suffered blindness, and become a captive of the Philistines.
Unlike the biblical account in Judges, Samson Agonistes focuses
only on the last day of Samson’s life. Discerning that he was victimized
by his own pride, Samson becomes chastened and humbled. He becomes
acutely aware of the necessity to atone for his sinfulness.
After the Restoration and despite jeopardy to himself, Milton continued
to advocate freedom of worship and republicanism for England, while he
supervised the publication of his major poems and other works. For a
time soon after the succession of Charles II, Milton was under arrest
and menaced by possible execution for involvement in the regicide and in
Cromwell’s government. Although the circumstances of clemency toward
Milton are not fully known, it is likely that certain figures
influential with the regime of Charles II—such as Christopher Milton, Andrew Marvell, and William Davenant—interceded
on his behalf. The exact date and location of Milton’s death remain
unknown; he likely died in London on November 8, 1674, from
complications of the gout (possibly renal failure). He was buried inside
St. Giles Cripplegate Church in London.
Source: http://www.britannica.com/biography/John-Milton
The purpose for this Blog is to discuss about the English poet John Milton and his work Paradise Lost.
ResponderExcluirTo begin with, John is one of the major figures of English literature, mostly known for Paradise Lost, which has been recognized as one of the classics of English literature. Milton was born in London on December 9, 1608 into a wealthy family, therefore, had a very happy childhood and a high level education. During his early age, he attended St. Paul's school. Later on he also attended at Christ's College, Cambridge. In 1638, he made a year-long journey and traveled to France, Switzerland, and Italy.
Milton began writing prose pamphlets on controversies of the church, he believed that the church needed "purification". Not only that but he wrote poems and published them. During his life he married three times and had four children. In the late 1650, Milton had became blind and with the help of his friends he continued writing and dedicated his entire work into Paradise Lost.
One of his famous poem is Paradise Lost, is an epic poem in blank verse, it's consisted of ten book with over ten thousand lines of verse and It was first published in 1667. The poem concerns a biblical story of the fall of Lucifer and the original sin. It has biblical allusions and a elevated language.
Hi guys,
ResponderExcluirSurely, beside Shakespeare, John Milton is one the most illustrious and important figures of English Literature. It is worth adding he also had political influence defended the republican regime in the reign of King Charles I, theme that dominated his political writings. John wrote many works such as sonnets, plays, articles, essays on religion and politics, but his most significant work is Paradise Lost an admirable epic poem which we will have the opportunity to learn more about it in this blog.
It is interesting that all the works of John Milton have the religious theme. His studies were solely based on his spirituality.
ResponderExcluirAnother important fact in his life and I didn't know was that he was practically blind during his most important works
ResponderExcluirMilton, from birth it is clear that his creation was extremely architected, this in my view, for his escolariedade has one of the best. His father John Milton, structured education of his son in a religious basis, and that's when he showed such great talent.
ResponderExcluirThe love of Milton by religion is demosntrado in each poem conceived by him. His life and his work is building on it.
One of the parts that I found very interesting in the text of the biography was: Paradise Lost: that the evil perpetrated by sinful humankind may be counteracted by Providence and que God will bring greater goodness out of evil
They are strong words, but well explained and understood.
It's is also interesting to bear in mind how Milton was modern for his historical time. He advocated freedom of the press and the idea that keeping a sour marriage is contrary to one's individual liberty, defending divorce many decades before it became a legal reality. (Prof. Valécio)
ResponderExcluirThere are differences of view amongst churches on divorce and remarriage. Some do not allow and others permit only for innocent spouse. For example, The Roman Catholic church believes divorce is immoral, therefore it only considere remarriage while both husband and wife are alive as adultery. And the English Church teaches that marriage is for life.
ResponderExcluirAlthough John comes from a religious background he wanted to apply to a divorce after his wife left. He was motivated into writing and publishing pamphlets, especially after Doctrine and Disciplined of Divorce.
"He believed that a couple is better off living apart from each other then living unhappy and bitter.
He, therefore, who lacking of his due in the most native and human end of marriage, thinks it better to part than to live sadly and injuriously to that cheerful covenant (for not to be beloved and yet retained, is the greatest injury to a gentle spirit), he, I say, who therefore seeks to part, is one who highly honors the married life and would not stain it: and the reasons which now move him to divorce are equal to the best of those that could first warrant him to marry; for, as was plainly shown, both the hate which now diverts him and the loneliness which leads him still powerfully to seek a fit help, hath not the least grain of a sin in it, if he be worthy to understand himself.
References:
https://www.wwnorton.com/college/english/nael/17century/topic_1/divorce.htm
http://www.christian.org.uk/resources/theology/apologetics/marriage-and-family/divorce/
When I read about his strong point of view of divorce and his way of thinking, I realised that Milton was ahead of his time. Imagine a man publish an argument about the advantages of divorce on a tract in the 17th century! This is indeed a very sensitive topic even in actual days. Furthermore, his point of view was based on his biblical knowledge, but had an particular way of thinking such precepts or in other words, a very personal way of interpreted a topic.
ResponderExcluirI agree with Israel when he said that this issue of divorce is complicated and sensitive even to this day and that Milton had a particular opinion on this subject. In my opinion, he did not was based on biblical knowledge to defend their arguments about the divorce. According text above about his biography “for Milton, marriage depends on the compatibility of the partners, and to maintain a marriage that is without mutual love and sympathy violates one’s personal liberty” and according the Bible these are not arguments for a divorce so I think Milton defended divorce because of his bad experience with the departure of his first wife. Well, I also think he had a very personal way of interpreted this topic.
ResponderExcluirEste comentário foi removido pelo autor.
ExcluirJohn Milton was the chief representative of English Classicism and creator of the work “Paradise Lost”, one of the most important works of world literature. After concluding of the studies, he makes a journey through France and Italy where traces a friendship with Galileo Galilei. The cultivation of reading authors such as Dante, Petrarca, Tasso and among others was crucial to his literary evolution. Thus formed research on mathematics, music and poetic creation. In 1964, when he was engaged in teaching, he published a treatise on education emphasizing the urgent need to make a change in British universities. That same year he published the best-known work “Aeropagitica”, a acclamation freedom of the press without worrying about copyright. In 1649, John Milton was stricken with serious vision problems that would let him completely blind. Three years later, he devotes himself to the cause of Oliver Cromwell ardent defender of British Puritanism. After the loss of vision, been arrested, he said the literary classic “Paradise Lost” released in 1667. Four years later comes the work “Paradise Regained” continuation of the previous volume. According to several authors, the beautiful of Nilton statements of faith were revealed by a man who became blind at the peak of his potential and that he was in God’s Hands.
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