Milton's Satan
continues to fascinate critics largely because he is so complex than the Devil
of the Christian tradition appears. Satan's rebelliousness, his seeking of
transcendence, his capacity for action, particularly unconventional action,
endeared him to certain types of minds, even if their viewpoint might be
considered theologically misleading. Milton often follows the road of
intellectual definition for his characters, of reasoning demonstration. This
serves well his theological and intellectual cohesiveness. However, when his
thought becomes more conceptual rather
than metaphoric, it falls trap to its own special kind of static imprisonment.
Most of the images in Paradise Lost, however, have a substantial life of their
own; they are properties rather than metaphors.
In the
presentation of Satan, Milton is dealing with a special difficulty. He is not
presenting a human intelligence, but an angelic one-a being the nature of which
is almost impossible for the human mind to grasp. Milton simplifies the matter
by making spiritual intelligences more highly refined versions of human
intelligence. He is still left with one problem, that of introducing a flaws in
this refined beings. Because of these refined intelligence, these creatures
should incline solely to good.
"So farwel Hope, and with Hope
farwel Fear,
Farwel Remorse: all Good to me is
lost;
Evil be thou my Good;"
(IV, 109-111)
In this intensely
dramatic statement, Satan renounces everything that's good. His is not a lack
of intelligence, or weakness of character, very simply an acceptance of evil.
It almost justifies C. S. Lewis' observation. "What we see in Satan is the
horrible co-existence of a subtle and incessant intellectual activity with an
incapacity to understand anything."
Although the
statement "Evil be thou my Good," makes no sense on the surface, it
has a symbolic meaning as an expression of Satan's will to reject the hierarchy
of values set before him. In doing so he creates an illusory world that
reflects his adopted values, which he accepts as reality. His reality is based
on hatred. His hatred makes him psychologically dependant on that he hates,
thus making it all the greater.
Throughout the epic Milton dramatizes this dependence among the devils-
even the hatred that gives them their energy is based on that reality which
they are bent on rejecting.
If Milton's
portrait of God does not display sufficient inspiration or detail, it still
does not follow that Milton regarded Satan as the hero. The artist projects
something of himself in his creation (his character); thus creating
"empathy" towards him/her. Moral approval for such projection is not
required or even implied. Moral approval will lie in reason rather that in
emotion. The meaning of good and evil must be reexamined by every generation.
Even though both meanings reside and function reasonably well on a popular
level, these words seldom provide enough cohesiveness to be analyzed in depth.
The solution-at any end-might a dilemma.
One cannot help
but feel that the fall of Satan was brought about by an intellectually
interesting temptation. Socrates believed that ignorance led to subversion, but
Satan's curiosity and, to certain extent, jealousy, came about as a result of
God's infinite and omnipotent being.
Surely, one must feel horror at a God who deliberately reduced Satan to
such condition. God's retaliation -
turning the rebels into snakes - and then continuing to work upon mankind
is an obvious challenge for power. Genesis (a story to which Milton adheres)
represents the Fall as a lack of knowledge, ignorance. But if Adam and Eve (and
Satan in his time) had no foreknowledge of evil - since God's creation was void
of it - how were they to know and discern. Therefore, how innocent is Milton'
God? He should be able to foresee any contingency, including that of evil. A
theological conundrum remains, for who is to blame God.
Theological and
character discussions of this caliber cannot be resolved or even postulated in
a few paragraphs. Arguments always tend to find their way to the original
intent for creation - life. Milton, however, brought us a step closer creating
a vast array of images and concepts that help our mundane senses appraise the situation, and
give a human face to The Great Conflict.
"But he that
hides a dark soul and foul thoughts
Benighted, walks
under the midday sun
Himself is his
own dungeon..."
John Milton
No comments:
Post a Comment