Eve's depraved talking and lost paradise As the Bible says, people explained a lot about human beings falling from grace. Interpretation of literature has John Milton's "Lost Paradise" and the American poet Lewis Intermail's "Eve Speech". The epic of John Milton is used to tell all the story of human depravity from grace, including the background of Satan's motive. "Eve Speaks" by Louis Untermeyer is about Eve's idea after she had to leave Eden for years. Both poems came from the same Biblical roots, but they provided different interpretations of the collapse of mankind through Adam's motives and Adam and her attitude.
When the 17th century poet John Milton played Eve in Lost of Paradise, he took a common attitude. This epic is a story that Adam and Eve depicted as falling down from heaven and creating it, always depicting Eve as weak, Adam is often compared with God. The woman's inferiority idea was solved over time, it is rather surprising that we accept the explanation of Milton's Eve rather than expecting it. But Milton showed the inner strength of a woman when explaining the rule of Adam of Eve. But, in addition to this example, Eve is depicted as a subordinate of Adam. Through the treatment of Adam and Rafael, this is obvious ... Read more
Eve's depraved talking and lost paradise As the Bible says, people explained a lot about human beings falling from grace. Interpretation of literature has John Milton's "Lost Paradise" and the American poet Lewis Intermail's "Eve Speech". The epic of John Milton is used to tell all the story of human depravity from grace, including the background of Satan's motive. "Eve Speaks" by Louis Untermeyer is about Eve's idea after she had to leave Eden for years. Both poems came from the same Biblical roots, but they provided different interpretations of the collapse of mankind through Adam's motives and Adam and her attitude.
John Milton opened "Lost Paradise" with a short summary of the book "The Argument"; these lines explain humans with sin after Eve and Adam eat from the prohibited fruit tree. They eat from this tree, bring death and sin, and "people" are kicked out of the garden of Eden and have to fight to survive. These lines of the first book that appeared in "Paradise Lost" suggested a crime of human obedience in the Garden of Eden, when Eve ate the fruit of forbidding it first. "Rice" on the first line is a metaphor of the puns of apples eve and Adam eats, and its behavior. After Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden of Eden, it was not until "a bigger person" that Jesus came to mankind to "recover".
The first human disobedience and forbidden fruit tree fruit, its deadly taste brings death to the world, and all our tragedies ... "in the line of John's lost paradise What are these explanations for?