Defense of the crime of sin and death in "Paradise of the Land" lost Milton's assertion that his epic "Lost Paradise" exceeded his mastery of his predecessor. He insisted that he solved the most important thing not only as a hero but as a history of all mankind. But when he introduced a fable to Paradise Lost by drawing sin and death in Volume 2, he did not seem to follow the rules of traditional epics. Some readers condemned his work because of this contradiction, but others proved his behavior and found a very important symbolic meaning from this "forbidden" text device It was.
John Milton Paradise Lost John Milton's Paradise Lost is a religious work, in many respects Milton's own autobiography of life. John Milton was promoted to Catholics and became Protestant. He later became a Calvinist. He can see his strong Calvinist faith throughout the lost paradise. Milton wants to be a great poet, but I do not believe this is the purpose of my life. He believes that he should be here to serve God and that everything he wrote should be ... the loss of John Milton's "lost paradise" Various roles The aspect and physical and psychological description provided by. Each of their views only reveals Milton's intention and the role of hell's poetry in this epic. Each character adds a new dimension to the physical and mental development of this different world. Narrator and Satan provide the most insightable insight about the dynamics of this underground world.
John Milton's "Paradise Lost" incorporates gender and death images and hints. Satan's character is not only the embody of death and sin but also the sexual desire of desire. The combination of sex and desire has important philosophical significance, especially subjects related to creation, destruction and existence. In the lost paradise, Milton believes it is related to sex. However, I do not want to confuse Milton with a stereotype Puritan. The poet Milton seems to be celebrating sexual ideals; however, he hates greed and warns of evil of desire, alleging that desire leads to sin, violence and death.
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?