In Divided Empire, Robert T. Fallon examines the influence of
John Milton's political experience on his great poems: Paradise
Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes. This study is a
natural sequel to Fallon's previous book, Milton in Government,
which examined Milton's decade of service as Secretary for Foreign
Languages to the English Republic.
Milton's works are crowded with political figures--kings,
counselors, senators, soldiers, and envoys--all engaged in a
comparable variety of public acts--debate, decree, diplomacy, and
warfare--in a manner similar to those who exercised power on the
world stage during his time in public office. Traditionally,
scholars have cited this imagery for two purposes: first, to
support studies of the poet's political allegiances as reflected in
his prose and his life; and, second, to demonstrate that his works
are sympathetic to certain ideological positions popular in present
times.
Fallon argues that Paradise Lost is not a political testament,
however, and to read its lines as a critique of allegiances and
ideologies outside the work is limit the range and scope of
critical inquiry and to miss the larger purpose of the political
imagery within the poem. That imagery, the author proposes, like
that of all Milton's later works, serves to illuminate the
spiritual message, a vision of the human soul caught up in the
struggle between vast metaphysical forces of good and evil. Fallon
seeks to enlarge the range of critical inquiry by assessing the
influence of personal and historical events upon art, asking, as he
puts it, "not what the poetry says about the events, but what the
events say about the poetry." Divided Empire probes, not Milton's
judgment on his sources, but the use he made of them.
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