Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Milton's social life
- 2 Milton's Ludlow Masque
- 3 Lycidas
- 4 Poems 1645
- 5 Milton's politics
- 6 Milton's prose
- 7 Milton's sonnets and his contemporaries
- 8 The genres of Paradise Lost
- 9 Language and knowledge in Paradise Lost
- 10 The Fall and Milton's theodicy
- 11 Milton's Satan
- 12 Milton and the sexes
- 13 Milton and the reforming spirit
- 14 How Milton read the Bible
- 15 Reading Samson Agonistes
- 16 Milton's readers
- 17 Milton's place in intellectual history
- 18 Milton's works and life
- Index
11 - Milton's Satan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Milton's social life
- 2 Milton's Ludlow Masque
- 3 Lycidas
- 4 Poems 1645
- 5 Milton's politics
- 6 Milton's prose
- 7 Milton's sonnets and his contemporaries
- 8 The genres of Paradise Lost
- 9 Language and knowledge in Paradise Lost
- 10 The Fall and Milton's theodicy
- 11 Milton's Satan
- 12 Milton and the sexes
- 13 Milton and the reforming spirit
- 14 How Milton read the Bible
- 15 Reading Samson Agonistes
- 16 Milton's readers
- 17 Milton's place in intellectual history
- 18 Milton's works and life
- Index
Summary
The controversy about Milton's Satan provides an opportunity to inspect the relationship between a literary text and critical reaction to it. This is instructive because it shows how literature works (or has worked), and how it should not be expected to work.
A word, first, about the generation of Milton's Satan. There is very little in the Bible about Satan. In Christian Doctrine Milton collects all the available biblical evidence in a few sentences. It amounts to little more than that Satan is the author of all evil and has various titles (YP 6: 349-50). As Kastor has shown, it was not until about AD 200 that official Judaism began to absorb popular concepts of Satan. From then on appearances of Satan in literature, sub-literature, and theology multiplied. Scores of literary Satans evolved, and some of them - notably those created by Du Bartas, Andreini, Grotius, and Vondel - possibly influenced Milton. However, no convincing single source for Milton's Satan has been found.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Milton , pp. 160 - 174Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
- 6
- Cited by