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5.0 out of 5 stars See the fall from Hell's perspective, May 29 2003
By 
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
In 1667, blind, thought to be at the end of his life, Milton composed one of the greatest epics in the English language. Much debated, much imitated, there no epics yet written that have equaled Paradise Lost. Milton wrote in blank verse (poetry without rhyme)that continues to amaze readers with his grasp of what the English language could do; only Shakespeare had a keener grasp.

Divided in to twelve books, Paradise Lost starts off showing us a vision of hell quite different of Dante's in that Hell is described not so much a place but an environment one's self creates.("The mind is its own place, and in itself/ Can make a Heav'n of Hell, a Hell of Heav'n.)Throughout the first four books we see the fall, Heaven, Hell, all through Satan's perspective. The last eight books are centered on the parents of mankind Adam and Eve. Reader may find their own intentions and philosophies on life brought to the surface in reading this book; look to finding which side one sympathizes with: Heaven, Hell, or Adam and Eve? Milton shows his genius in getting each side's thought processes to the forefront. I remember in book X relating with Adam and Eve in their debate following the fall.

Readers may find the language difficult, but if they have prepared themselves by reading a little of Shakespeare and a little of John Donne, it will be considerably easier. Don't allow the language to daunt you, it's worth it!

As to which edition to buy, you have two options: if you're poor, (like me) you'll probably want to go with the Penguin edition; it has good notes, and the introduction is okay. If you have a bit more cash on you go with the Norton Critical Edition edited by Scott Elledge; it has excellent notes, and includes a wide body of analysis on Milton by many different authors.

It's been a long time since I have come across a book that speaks to me so deeply. I will probably read this several more times. I recommend this to all readers that have the courage to plunge headlong into seventeenth century prose.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Heaven and Hell, Mar 18 2003
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This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
It is impossible to rate a classic like this. This epic poem about the Garden of Eden spans everything from the Creation of the world to the war in Heaven to Satan's fall into Hell, and also touches on the entire history of Israel. The poem is absolutely beautiful, and Adam and Eve are presented in such a way as to seem truly innocent before the fall and prone to sin after the fall (though they are also much wiser). Everything, from Satan's temptation to Adam and Eve being consumed by lust immediately after eating the fruit, is portrayed in a very remarkable and real way.

This work is supremely enlightening, especially for Christian readers. Milton retains a touch of Classical mythology, yet integrates it in such a way as to fit into the Christian story. With this poem, Milton successfully equated himself with such masters of the epic as Homer and Virgil (which was his aim, as declared in book one). I cannot praise this epic or its sublime effect enough , so I will content myself by saying that this is one poem that everyone should read, for both its scholarly and its religious value.

"The Mind is its own place, and in itself
Can make a heav'n of hell, a hell of heav'n" (book 1, 254-255)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Milton clearly ate from the Tree of Knowledge., Feb 22 2003
By 
Declan "also_private" (Dublin., Leinster. Ireland) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
I came to this work by Milton as a literary layman: I know next to nothing about the art of literature. I am also an atheist, to the core, yet this work, based entirely on Christianity, has much appeal for me. I think I can safely say that I've never come across so many convincing descriptions and arguments about various aspects of human nature, and they are arguments expressed in sometimes achingly beautiful verse.
Nevertheless, I found this book very difficult; my memory (needed for long sentences) and my understanding were probably stretched to the limit. You've to be constantly on your mental toes, which is the reader's shortcoming, not the author's, it needn't be said. But it was entirely worth it, both for what I believe is my increased understanding or appreciation of some aspects of human nature, and for those moments when certain thoughts were expressed in certain ways.
There is also an hilarious moment in this book between Satan and various Angels he is waging war against.
I shall make a point of reading this book 3 or 4 more times in my life, and I think I shall enjoy it more each time. But you should know that it is very intellectual.
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5.0 out of 5 stars One of the 'Few', Sep 7 2002
By 
DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
Milton himself accurately assessed his likely readership as being 'few'. No wonder. I haven't verified this, but I believe Dr Johnson's comment on reading Paradise Lost was something like 'This is not even English'. I do recall T S Eliot's two famous onslaughts on him for much the same reason, and Eliot's description of the Miltonic idiom as 'a lingo of his own based on English', which I would call exactly right, only I don't see that as a criticism. To me Milton is a drug. I love sound, I love language and I know Latin poetry (Greek as well, but that is more important for the mythology than the poetry). I also know my bible pretty well, as atheists often do. For me, Paradise Lost is about two things -- first to justify the ways of God to men, and second that incredible lingo. I'm not sure how anyone who does not have a good knowledge of Latin, its poetry in particular, can really appreciate Milton's idiom. Eliot makes a song and dance over certain of its features, one I remember from Samson being about the moon

'Hid in her vacant interlunar cave', about which Eliot acutely observes that the word 'interlunar' is not necessary to the sense. Sure it's not. Offhand from Paradise Lost I could quote

'Of light the greater part by far he took
Transplanted from her cloudy shrine', where you can say the same about 'transplanted', and there are hundreds of such instances. This is a very characteristic way that Latin poetry in general expressed itself, and Eliot has got the wrong end of the stick by not understanding that. Much of Milton's vocabulary is also half-Latin, e.g. 'complicated' meaning knotted and countless other such. I can never unknow my Latin, thank God, and so I can never be sure just what Milton' poetry, as opposed to his theology, conveys to those who read him without it.

When I had Milton forced down my throat, my unhearing ears (maybe even my 'blind mouth') at school (I did not pursue English further but went for Greek and Latin), the orthodox view appeared to be that Satan was some great piece of 'characterisation'. To this day that interpretation means nothing to me. Milton is all about sound and language, not characters. God, Satan (Ariel does not get anything to say), Adam, Eve, Ithuriel and the whole mighty harlequinade are all just talking the great Miltonic talk, like the author himself between the speeches. The thought creates the tone of the talk, and the tone creates the characters. In the early books Satan is the focus, in the later Adam and Eve. They sound different because they think differently. This is not drama or anything resembling drama.

Milton justifies the ways of God to me very well. I was brought up religious and I am at home with theological argument. Milton's argument is strong given his base position as an intense believer, and it is what underpins the terrific strength and the unremitting concentration of his whole apocalyptic vision. To me God is just a hypothesis and that is as far as I can go with him, and to me poetry is far more significant than theology. I have read a load of pretentious hot air about what poetry is, but the remark that illuminated the issue to me more than all the rest of it was by Housman in an address on Swinburne, when he said 'poetry is a tone of voice, a way of saying things'. Bingo. Spot on. Paradise Lost to me is all one mighty voice talking 'in divers tones' as Tennyson has it.

On a lighter note, did you know that the word 'backside' is used in Paradise Lost? You will find it at III/494 as part of his attack on Catholicism. This is a particularly memorable passage, and I say that not as an atheist but as someone who appreciates humour. My memory of Milton outside of Paradise Lost is lengthening, though I plan to refresh it, but at the moment it is the only instance of anything that could even possibly be seen as humour in Milton. I choose to forget everything I have seen described as 'humour' in Comus.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Our Fall from Innocence, Aug 14 2002
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
Milton's great epic poem was written "to justify the ways of God to men", thus telling the story of Lucifer's expulsion from Heaven and Adam's subsequent banishment from Eden. The classic representations of idyllic Eden, fiery Hell, and glorious Heaven are as rich now as when they were first created in 1667.

Paradise Lost is a very complicated, yet rewarding, Epic poem. It is by far the best of its kind in the English language, and where it lacks in original conventions, it more than makes up for it in its pure power of poetry. For those readers of translations who are unable to enjoy Homer's Greek, Virgil's Latin or Dante's Italian, Paradise Lost can offer them a unique chance to enjoy an epic poem in its original vernacular.

However, you must bear in mind that Paradise Lost is one of the most difficult pieces of poetry to read, and is by no means as simple as reading a translation of Homer or Virgil. The language is lexically dense, with complex grammar structures at times. These hurdles will be found considerably easier for experienced readers of Shakespeare, and those who are already aware of common traits of epic poetry.

Milton's use of language is majestic, boasting an impressive metre. The poem is lavished with many famous quotes that have become ingrained into everyday English, with such examples as "Pandemonium" and "All hell broke loose". Paradise Lost is, without a doubt, a must read for any intellectual English reader.

Like all epic poetry Milton's piece of art is highly indebted to Homer's conventions, with typical imitations of the Iliad's list of warriors and the Odyssey's garden of Alcinous. But Milton's debt to the Classics manifests itself as a representation of learned study, (with links to such writers as Aeschylus, Sophocles, Plato, Shakespeare and Spenser), therefore it does not so much as pilfer from great literature, as it instead endeavours to become a part of it.

Paradise Lost offers the epic reader a new form of subject, not just the usual heroes and large battles, but a theme which captivates the reader - the devils fall and man's respectively. The rebel Angels' descent from heaven to hell and Adam's from Eden to a desolate "outside" world, captivate the reader with an intriguing theme: the loss of innocence and the fall into experience. Why must Man sin? What is his relationship to Satan's loss of grace? And where does God's image of himself measure with his own maker? Milton's poem may lack the great Achilles and the gleaming towers of Troy, but it does offer much intellectual food for thought.

This Penguin edition is a rare find of value for money, it is not particlularly inexpensive, but come on ... please bear in mind the tiny price tag on this book - for less than half the price of a DVD you can own the English language's greatest poetic feat!

It is the Miltonic Satan that really comes to the forefront of this poem. The cunning fallen angel, who decides that "All good to me is lost; Evil, be thou my Good" (IV.109-10), is as appealing to the reader as Marlowe's "Nun-poisoning" Barabas the Jew. It is with some guilt that this present commentator must own to rooting for this most infamous baddy throughout the poem. With a display of wit almost as sharp as Ovid or Nonnos, Milton indisputably gives his best lines to God's antagonist. This Devil is not just a superficial evil being, but instead a complex character; one that feels remorse for his fall, love for his close friends, and a harrowing jealousy of Man. What we are given by Milton's villain is not just a rewarding psychological study of Christianity's Devil, but also a commentary upon our own ignoble actions.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Do you Milton?, May 5 2002
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
John Milton's Paradise Lost is one of the most well-written books ever, and compares to such great epics as the Iliad or The Odyssey. Using great descriptive words, John Milton paints a beautiful picture that intensifies the tragedy that is the Fall.

This book starts out kinda confusing. When you begin reading it, it might be a bit hard. You would need absolute quiet to concentrate. But as you are lured deeper and deeper into the swirling wonders of the book, it gets easier to read, and you begin to understand a kind of rhythm that exists within the book.

There are some points in the book that are kinda boring, but the good parts are worth reading.

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4.0 out of 5 stars John Milton, Jan 26 2002
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
Paradise Lost is extremely esoteric, requiring one with an affluent knowledge of vocabulary and an ability to recognize allusions made to the Bible.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great!!, Jan 26 2002
By 
Scycis (Antarctica) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
This book (or more like epic poem) is one of the greatest pieces of literature of all time. This long poem describes Satan and his Angel's fall from Paradise and in great detail. If you enjoy christian books or into the occult you will love this book. Otherwise, you will like it too. But it is aimed at older readers, if you're a 13 year old wanting to read this, Don't get your hopes up.
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5.0 out of 5 stars My Favorite Epic Poem, Oct 16 2001
By 
miked99 (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
"Paradise Lost" is simply one of the most beautiful poems ever written. Milton's descriptions are so filled with color and emotion that I felt like I could see this celestial event taking place in front of me. "Paradise Lost" is the story of Satan's fall from grace, God's subsequent creation of Earth and Man, and Satan's deadly corruption of God's masterpiece. Not only was Milton's writing so legendary but his respect for Scripture was equally admirable.

"Paradise Lost" is a foundational work of Western Culture that should be read by every western citizen, if only for the finale in which Adam is taken up a hill near Eden by Michael, the arch-angel, and shown the future of the world. Standing there he sees the world with a view that modern man loves to deny:

"...I had hope/When violence was ceas't, and Warr on Earth,/All would have gon well, peace would have crownd/With length of happy dayes the race of man;/But I was farr deceav'd; for now I see/Peace to corrupt no less than Warr to waste."

While this scene is a fictional scenario, it is an ingenius way for Milton to not only express the despair and guilt that Adam must have felt, but to tell the reader of the Hope that God would restore to Adam's race through His Son. This is the theme of Milton's wonderful poem.

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4.0 out of 5 stars a pudding, July 9 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Penguin Classics Paradise Lost (Paperback)
As my mother tongue isn't English, it is a bit difficult to read this book first. However,the situation starts getting better after the few pages. I enjoy reading this poem aloud just like playing words. I'd love to read this again during leisure time . The feeling of it is just like tasting a pudding slowly, unforgettable and reminds me lots of fairy tales and fables.
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