Dryden was an admirer of Milton's, and described
Paradise Lost as "one of the greatest, most noble and most sublime poems which either this Age or Nation has produc'd". According to
John Aubrey, Milton gave Dryden his personal permission to adapt the poem: This reference to the metal "tags" affixed to the ends of cords or laces may hint at Milton's contempt of rhyme as something purely fashionable and ornamental. Dryden's work, originally titled
The Fall of Angels and Man in Innocence: An Heroic Opera, was completed within the space of a month, but the intended opera was never produced. Unofficial transcripts of the libretto began to circulate, however, and the errors in these copies so annoyed Dryden that he was finally induced, in 1677, to publish an authorised version. ==Style==