« Taiwan Journal of Political Science No.14Publish: 2001/06

The Heavenly War and Its Reflection on Earth: Paradise Lost and 17 th Century England

Author: Sy-Shyan Chen

Abstract / Chinese PDF Download

John Milton has been a puzzle for many students of the 17th century English politics or political thought: was he a radical like the Levellers, as Christopher Hill has indicated? or was he a republican like Algernon Sydney, Andrew Marvell and James Harrington? Or maybe he was in fact a proponent of monarchy as long as it’s not a tyranny? Most conducive   to   this   perplexities   has   been   the   controversial   epic   poem   Paradise Lost—written  during  the  last  years  of  Milton’s  life—in  which  the  poet  embraces  the universal  monarchy  of  God  while  berating  those  selfish  revolutionaries  who  corrupted the republican enterprise and therefore brought about the Stuart restoration in 1660. This  passage  intends  to  investigate  into  the  moral,  theological  and  political languages embedded in the poetics of Paradise Lost, in the hope that a penetrating clue can be revealed as to how the concept of Christian liberty can be linked to secular politics and,  also,  used  as  a  criterion  to  assess  the  achievements  of  public  life.  One  of  the tantalizing results from the political  reading  of  the  epic  poem  is  that  it  helps  to  reveal, among  other  things,  the  ingenuity  of  Milton  in  fusing  the  pagan  political  tradition  of republicanism with Christianity under the English millenarianism. Moreover, by so doing, the  poet  is  in  fact  redefining  the  political  through  his  edifying  lyrics  dedicated  to  the Christian  theme  of  redemption  which—not  to  anyone’s  surprise—can  properly  be coterminous with the secular phenomenon of the restoration of the political order.

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