Satan (1808).
Satan, formerly called
Lucifer, is the first major character introduced in the poem. He is a tragic figure who famously declares: "Better to reign in Hell, than serve in Heaven" (1.263). He viewed God as a tyrannical figure and refused to be subjected to his reign. Satan was able to accumulate an army of angels who were loyal to his cause. He strove to "set himself in Glory above his Peers," and the pair of "Rebel angels" worked alongside him. Following his vain
rebellion against
God, he is cast out from Heaven and condemned to Hell. The rebellion stems from Satan's pride and envy, derived from God's proclamation that the Son of God was "anointed" as the saviour (5.660-664ff). As a result, Satan "thought himself impaird", meaning that his envy caused him to perceive himself as being lessened through God's actions. Satan is also depicted as a persuasive and charismatic being, whose rhetorical skills allow him to manipulate others and rally the fallen angels. What makes him so effective is his ability to "[adapt] his arguments" to suit his needs in any given situation. Some scholars have noted that Milton's use of heroic language, demonstrated in Satan's depiction of having a "fixt mind", "unconquerable Will" and "courage never to submit or yield", contributes to the human-like complexity of his character (1.97, 106, 108). These characteristics resemble an
epic hero, but his moral corruption and rebellion undermine this ideal. He maintains autonomy throughout
Paradise Lost as he is not compelled to act, but rather plans meticulously for the fall of man and carries it out of his own accord. Satan's psychological trajectory evolves throughout the poem as his character progresses. Early on, Milton portrays him as a figure of sublimity and a powerful personality, which captivates those who behold him. He presents the qualities of a leader or a great orator. Book 4 marks a turning point in his psyche. Scholars cite Satan's "
abjection" as he internally isolates himself from his followers. Satan stands at the center of
Paradise Lost. Milton structures much of the poem around his intentions and his actions. Despite Blake thinking that Milton intended for Satan to have a heroic role in the poem, Blake himself described Satan as the "state of error," and as beyond salvation.
John Carey argues that this conflict cannot be solved because the character of Satan exists in more modes and greater depth than the other characters of
Paradise Lost: in this way, Milton has created an ambivalent character, and any "pro-Satan" or "anti-Satan" argument is by its nature discarding half the evidence. Satan's ambivalence, Carey says, is "a precondition of the poem's success a major factor in the attention it has aroused".
C. S. Lewis argues in his
A Preface to Paradise Lost that it is important to remember what society was like when Milton wrote the poem. In particular, during that time period, there were certain "stock responses" to elements that Milton would have expected every reader to have. As examples, Lewis lists "love is sweet, death bitter, virtue lovely, and children or gardens delightful." According to Lewis, Milton would have expected readers not to view Satan as a hero at all. Lewis argues that readers far in the future romanticising Milton's intentions is not accurate.
Comparative religion scholar
R. J. Zwi Werblowsky argues in his
Lucifer and Prometheus that Milton's Satan is a disproportionately appealing character because of attributes he shares with the
Greek Titan Prometheus. It has been called "most illuminating" for its historical and
typological perspective on Milton's Satan as embodying both positive and negative values. The book has also been significant in pointing out the essential ambiguity of Prometheus and his dual
Christ-like/Satanic nature as developed in the
Christian tradition.
Adam Adam is the first human created by God. Adam requests a companion from God: God approves his request then creates Eve. God appoints Adam and Eve to rule over all the creatures of the world and to reside in the Garden of Eden. Adam is more gregarious than Eve and yearns for her company. He is completely infatuated with her. Raphael advises him to "take heed lest Passion sway / Thy Judgment" (5.635–636). But Adam's great love for Eve contributes to his disobedience to God. Unlike the biblical Adam, before Milton's Adam leaves Paradise he is given a glimpse of the future of mankind by the Archangel Michael, which includes stories from the
Old and
New Testaments.
Eve ,
The Temptation and Fall of Eve, 1808 (illustration of Milton's
Paradise Lost).
Eve is the second human created by God. God takes one of Adam's ribs and shapes it into Eve. When Eve awakes after being created, she is next to a lake where she sees and admires a reflection in the water, not understanding it to be herself. A voice speaks to her and leads her to Adam, and informs the two of who each other are. When she first meets Adam, she turns away, being more interested in returning to the watery reflection, Milton's allusion to the myth of Narcissus. Recounting this to Adam she confesses that she found him less enticing than her reflection (4.477–480). Adam and Eve live in the Garden of Eden together, where they care for the garden and its creatures. Eve delivers an autobiography in Book 4. Book four, lines 440-491 is the first instance in the poem of Eve speaking. During this speech, Eve recounts to Adam her memory of her creation. Later in book four, Milton depicts Satan whispering into Eve's ear as she sleeps, and her resulting dream reinforces her earlier admiration for her own reflection (4.800-809). In Book 9, Milton stages a domestic debate between Adam and Eve about whether they should separate for a time to work in different parts of the Garden. The couple have always worked to this point. Eve argues that working apart will be more efficient, and ultimately, Adam agrees. Satan's temptation depends upon finding Eve alone. Having entered into the mouth of the serpent, Satan approaches Eve and begins to flatter her, alleging that her beauty makes her almost divine. When Eve asks how a snake is able to speak, Satan tells a story about how he ate the fruit from the Tree of Knowledge, using the language of Renaissance love poetry. Satan explains that the fruit gave him the ability to speak and reason, and he says that Eve could use the same fruit to achieve godhead. With this story Satan overcomes Eve's obedience to God; she eats the fruit. But for Beverly McCabe, "Milton uses Eve as a catalyst to elicit weaknesses in others - namely, Adam and Satan. By juxtaposing Eve with Adam and Satan, Milton makes her a vessel through which he forewarns the reader, giving validity to the fall."
The Son of God (1808) The
Son of God is the spirit who will become incarnate as
Jesus Christ, though he is never named explicitly because he has not yet entered human form. Milton believed in a
subordinationist doctrine of
Christology that regarded the Son as secondary to the Father and as God's "great Vice-regent" (5.609). Milton's God in
Paradise Lost refers to the Son as "My word, my wisdom, and effectual might" (3.170). The poem is not explicitly
anti-trinitarian, but it is consistent with Milton's convictions. The Son is the ultimate hero of the epic and is infinitely powerful—he single-handedly defeats Satan and his followers and drives them into Hell. After their fall, the Son of God tells Adam and Eve about God's judgement. Before their fall the Father foretells their "Treason" (3.207) and that Man The Father then asks whether there "Dwels in all Heaven charitie so deare?" (3.216) and the Son volunteers himself. In the final book a vision of Salvation through the Son is revealed to Adam by Michael. The name Jesus of Nazareth, and the details of Jesus' story are not depicted in the poem, though they are alluded to. Michael explains that "Joshua, whom the Gentiles Jesus call", prefigures the Son of God, "his name and office bearing" to "quell / The adversarie Serpent, and bring back [...] long wander[e]d man / Safe to eternal Paradise of rest".
God the Father , 18th century
God the Father is the creator of Heaven, Hell, the world, of everyone and everything there is, through the agency of His Son. Milton presents God as all-powerful and all-knowing, as an infinitely great being who cannot be overthrown by even the great army of angels Satan incites against him. Milton portrays God as often conversing about his plans and his motives for his actions with the Son of God. The poem shows God creating the world in the way Milton believed it was done, that is, God created Heaven, Earth, Hell, and all the creatures that inhabit these separate planes from part of Himself, not out of nothing. Thus, according to Milton, the ultimate authority of God over all things that happen derives from his being the "author" of all creation. Satan tries to justify his rebellion by denying this aspect of God and claiming self-creation, but he admits to himself the truth otherwise, and that God "deserved no such return / From me, whom He created what I was".
Raphael (1808).
Raphael is an archangel who is sent by God to Eden in order to strengthen Adam and Eve against Satan. Raphael is described as having six wings. The first pair are "regal with ornament" (5.280). The next pair are "dipped in colors of Heaven" (5.283) The third pair then "shadowed either heel with feathered mail" (5.284). When Raphael finally reaches the bower, where Adam and Eve dwell, his conversation with Adam and Eve extends all the way from Book 5 to Book 8. In Book 5, the discussion between Adam and Raphael pertains to the nature of the angels in Heaven, including the fact that angels eat food. The archangel then describes the celebration of the angels in Heaven after the
Son of God was begotten, with tables were high with heavenly food, singing and dancing. God's announcement that he has begotten a son inspires envy in Satan who decamps with his followers to the northern reaches of Heaven. In Book 6, Raphael tells a heroic tale about the
War in Heaven. Ultimately, the story told by Raphael, in which Satan is portrayed as bold, manipulative, and decisive, does not prepare Adam and Eve to counter Satan's subtle temptations and some critics argue that Raphael helped cause the Fall. In Book 7, Adam asks Raphael about the creation of the cosmos, to which Raphael "responds mild" and proceeds to tell Adam about each day of creation (7.110). In Book 8, Adam asks about the planets and the stars, wondering why the Sun, which is much larger, appears to orbit the smaller Earth. Raphael responds telling Adam that his role is not to question the secrets of the cosmos but "Rather admire" (8.75). Adam also asks Raphael if angels express their love physically. Raphael seems to blush at this statement "with a smile that glowed / Celestial rosy red" and confirms that angels have their own ways of loving and being intimate (8.618-619). Critic William Epsom notes that this "blushing" is a way that Milton humanises the angels.
Michael Michael is an
archangel who is preeminent in military prowess. He leads in battle and uses a sword which was "giv'n him temperd so, that neither keen / Nor solid might resist that edge" (6.322–323). God sends Michael to Eden, charging him: He is also charged with establishing a guard for Paradise. When Adam sees him coming he describes him to Eve as
Abdiel Abdiel, meaning in Hebrew "Servant of God" is a
seraph in
Paradise Lost. He is introduced in book 5 by
Raphael while recounting to Adam the events that led to Satan's fall. Abdiel first appears in the host of angels listening to Satan's speech, in which Satan calls for rebellion against God. He is characterized by his "zeal" in obeying the "divine commands" (5.805-806), and serves as the lone angel in Satan's audience to argue with Satan, and refuse to take part in the rebellion. He implores Satan and his host to abandon the rebellious effort, but is ultimately denied and sent away to deliver news of the insurrection to God. In book 6, during the war in heaven between the rebel angels and God's angelic host, Abdiel echoes and reproves Satan's famous line "Better to reign in Hell, than serve in Heaven" (1.263), saying "Reign thou in Hell thy kingdom, let me serve/ In Heav'n God ever blest..." (6.183-184), and is the first to strike a blow against Satan (6.189-191). Abdiel as a character has been criticized as being a needless and ineffective opponent to Satan's rhetoric, and a
self-insert for Milton that reveals "his preoccupation with the theme of the one just man who opposes an erring multitude...". It has been argued however, that Abdiel fits into the epic genre as a stock character, "the epic malcontent", whose "function is to oppose the hero, who is about to undertake a glorious, usually martial, adventure.", Sin's body is corrupted through incestuous intercourse and mutilation from the births of her children, Death and the hellhounds. This serves as an opposition to Eve's beauty and the sanctity of her sexual relationship with Adam, and the distortion of Sin's body, as well as her "lethally fertile" womb, encapsulate the abominable nature of Hell. Sin has been interpreted through contrasting frameworks of victimhood and seduction. Some scholars stress the significance of Sin being a victim of rape due to the nature of her intercourse with Satan and Death and the violation the hellhounds impose by repeatedly forcing themselves back into her womb. Sin's lack of bodily autonomy and the torment she suffers situate her in a position of innocence and invite compassion rather than condemnation. At the same time, other interpretations highlight Sin as a temptress, emphasising the sexual connotations and symbolism embedded within her character. In "Childlessness, Monstrosity, and Redemption: Exploring Motherhood in John Milton's
Paradise Lost", A. Louise Cole, explores how Sin's role as a mother complicates her identity further, situating her within the framework of both postlapsarian and prelapsarian sin. Cole examines Sin as the first mother in
Paradise Lost saying, "Milton's decision to make Sin female and a mother also allows us to read her character as the embodiment of the Son's curse upon Eve and her descendants." The sexual implications and actions of Sin set a complex analysis according to Cole she is both the object of sexual desire but has no agency of her own. '' by
John Martin, 1841
John S.P. Tatlock attributes
James 1:15 as the foundation for Milton's
allegory of Sin and her son Death: "Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin: and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death." Robert B. White asserts that the foundation is the
Holy Trinity, which Milton perverts to frame Sin as a hellish version of the Son. Critics offer mixed opinions on the effectiveness of Milton's allegorical framework.
Joseph Addison published his critiques in his magazine
The Spectator in the early 18th century. Addison admired the captivating and vivid quality of Milton's descriptions, but believed Sin and Death's fantastical qualities undermined the serious tone and realism of stories in the epic genre.
Samuel Johnson similarly argued that Milton's allegorical argument is weakened by the tangible impacts and interactions Sin and Death have despite representing abstract concepts. Other academics contend that the allegory provides a compelling contrast to the excellence of God and His creations. Professor James S. Baumlin argues that Milton's allegory extends to Hell's other inhabitants and likens each of them to one of the
Seven Deadly Sins. Sin exhibits a dual allegory as she symbolises both the concept of sin and the vice of
Lust.
Death Death in
Paradise Lost is represented as an undefined shadowy figure. Readers are first introduced to Death in Book 2 when Satan encounters Death at the gates of Hell. Milton gives no clear description as to what Death looks like other than that it is a shapeless black shadow. Milton presents Death as the incestuous offspring of Sin, who herself is born from Satan, making Death the direct result of Satan's earlier rebellion. According to
A Milton Encyclopedia, Death's undefined and shifting form reflects his status as an allegorical being whose identity is rooted in disorder rather than stable creation. His birth situates him as both a consequence of Satan's actions and an extension of the chaos that rebellion produces. In Book 10, Satan returns towards of Hell and encounters Sin and Death who are going down to earth, which Satan has effectively conquered by successfully tempting Adam and Eve. They will infect and destroy all living things. In Book 10, Death again is described as merely a "shadow" (10.264). The interaction of Sin and Death shows them working together to continue the disorder that began with Satan's rebellion. As Stephen Fallon explains in ''"Milton's Sin and Death: The Ontology of Allegory in Paradise Lost"'', Milton uses Sin and Death to show how allegorical beings can both embody and perpetuate the consequences of rebellion. In this scene, Death's presence illuminates the ongoing spread of that chaos as he and Sin move into the world beyond Hell.
Beelzebub Beelzebub, in Paradise Lost, is
Satan's second-in-command and the fallen angel who plays a central role in organising the demons after their expulsion from
Heaven (1.79). He is depicted as cunning, persuasive, and politically strategic, often acting as the voice that articulates Satan's broader plans to the infernal council (2.378-380). Throughout the epic, Beelzebub's speeches help shape the demons' course of action, positioning him as one of Hell's leaders (2.299-301). ==Locations==