In the paradise of John Milton the interpretation of the heaven and the lost heavens of Satan, he says that Satan was expelled from heaven. He and his brigade are planning a war with God and are now doomed to roll in hot places in hell. Satan is a complex person with many meaningful qualities. The relationship between the quality of Satan and the atmosphere of hell tells more readers why they seem to go hand in hand. Without features of Satan and torture of hell, this place is not everything.
Lost Paradise Hero John Milton introduced Satan to the reader in the first book of Paradise Lost. After rebelling against God in heaven, Satan was defeated at the lake of fire. Satan rose from the lake and made a heroic speech to his fallen angel. This shows that Satan is a tragic hero, a person who is destined to fail though thought to be great. Satan tried to be the winner, but in the end Satan failed and Christ was a real hero. The paradise of Satan Milton lost the fall of mankind in the loss of heaven from the war of heaven Satan's weapon is always some form of fraud (Anderson, 135). Milton's "Lost Paradise" explains the story of Adam and Eve's Bible. Epic resembles the Bible story in many ways, but Milton's Satania personality structure is different from the Bible versions. Milton describes the role as a way he believes
After he studied Satan and his kingdom, after hell, Milton noticed that Milton must be a true Bible scholar, after comparing and contrasting these two characteristics through the Bible and the lost paradise. Because Milton's Satan is very close to Satan's view of the Bible, it is difficult to distinguish between them. - Since Satan was not taught from the beginning, many people believed it was evil, but John Milton proved that Satan is very similar to us in his poem. In John Milton's lost heaven, Satan is a more human being, then he is a considerate person because he is like an image of God.
Satan's changing view comes from John Milton's epic "Paradise Lost" (1667), which Satan is taking the initiative. Milton is Puritan and never meant to portray him as Satan's sympathy. But when he betrayed God while drawing Satan as a victim of his pride, he allowed others to be sexually treated and interpreted as rebels against tyranny. This is something like Milton Satan's understanding understood later by the publisher Joseph Johnson and an anarchist philosopher William Godwin who readers reflected this in the 1793 discussion on political justice. A little. "Paradise Lost" has been widely read in the 18th century in the UK and continental Europe, and translated it into French. Therefore Milton became "a central figure in rewriting Satanism" and was later regarded as "de facto Satanist" by many later religious Satanists.