Lecture Description
In this final lecture on Paradise Lost, Book Twelve's justification for the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the garden is examined alongside the Genesis account. The nature of Milton's God, whether literal or liberal, is examined at length. The poem's closing lines are closely read, with substantial attention paid to Milton's final, complicated take on the poem-long consideration of Providence and free will.
Course Description
A study of Milton's poetry, with some attention to his literary sources, his contemporaries, his controversial prose, and his decisive influence on the course of English poetry.
Related Resources
Lecture Transcript, Handouts, and Reading Assignment
Course Index
- Introduction: Milton, Power, and the Power of Milton
- The Infant Cry of God
- Credible Employment
- Poetry and Virginity
- Poetry and Marriage
- Lycidas
- Lycidas (cont)
- Areopagitica
- Paradise Lost, Book I
- God and Mammon: The Wealth of Literary Memory
- The Miltonic Simile
- The Blind Prophet
- Paradise Lost, Book III
- Paradise Lost, Book IV
- Paradise Lost, Books V-VI
- Paradise Lost, Books VII-VIII
- Paradise Lost, Book IX
- Paradise Lost, Books IX-X
- Paradise Lost, Books XI-XII
- Paradise Lost, Books XI-XII (cont)
- Paradise Regained, Books I-II
- Paradise Regained, Books III-IV
- Samson Agonistes
- Samson Agonistes (cont)