Paradise Lost Essay

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In Book I of Paradise Lost, Milton describes the battle between good and evil, and the portrayal of Satan as a ‘hero’ to try and destroy God’s magnificent plan.

The first impression of Satan that Milton tries to get across to the reader is of Satan’s absolute greatness: this particular quote refers to the hugeness of his spear alone, ‘To equal which the tallest pine / Hewn on Norwegian hills’, and he even states that his shield is the size of the moon. Milton uses ‘human’ terms to express the sheer size and power of Satan and his followers, the fallen angels. ‘He above the rest, / In shape and gesture proudly eminent, / Stood like a tower;’ Even though Satan is the leader of the fallen angels and of Hell, he would not be able even to think about fighting God without them, but he is still represented by Milton as a huge figure, even to the most powerful of his followers. The poet builds up Satan’s character by referring to earthly objects (‘the tallest pine’, ‘tower’) as comparisons, and he is able to use more monstrous and horrifying similes to portray this (‘bottomless perdition’, ‘penal fire’).

A very important first epic simile describes the utter magnitude of Satan, and represents Satan as the ‘leviathan’: ‘With fixed anchor in his scaly rind, /….. / So stretched out huge in length the Arch-Fiend lay,’ which is then mistaken by the fishermen to be a land mass, ‘Deeming some island,’. Some quotes, while they render Satan still to be huge and overpowering, also give an impression of Satan being graceless and cumbersome. ‘As whom the fables name of monstrous size, / Titanian, or Earth-born, that warred on Jove, / Briareos or Typhon, whom the den / By ancient Tarsus held, or that sea-beast Leviathan, which God of all his works /...

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...d is its own place, and in itself / Can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.” I think that these lines have the most impact in the whole of Book I, because Satan says that anything can come true if you believe in it enough, and that is where he gets his hope from, to be able to keep trying to attack God. Another reason why I think it is important is that the sentence is only two lines long, which is very unusual for Milton as most of his sentences are up to a paragraph long, which provides emphasis for the reader to notice it. This shows that Satan thinks that his own free mind is greater than God’s free will, and although this might seem stupid and foolish at first, I think it shows great courage. Finally, I believe that there is an underlying meaning that suggests that any individual can create their own Heaven or Hell on Earth in the way they live their life.

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