Paradise Lost, John Milton - Helen Gardner (essay date 1948)
Helen Gardner (essay date 1948)
SOURCE: “Milton's “Satan” and the Theme of Damnation in Elizabethan Tragedy,” in Milton: Modern Essays in Criticism, edited by Arthur E. Barker, Oxford University Press, 1965, pp. 205-17.
[In the following essay, originally published in English Studies in 1948, Gardner considers the character of Satan, responding to other critics' assessments of him and determining that Milton developed the figure dramatically throughout the poem and “expended his creative energies and his full imaginative powers in exploring the fact of perversity within a single heroic figure.”]
We are all familiar with the progeny of Milton's Satan and the effort of most recent criticism has been directed towards clearing the Satan of Milton's poem from his associations with the Promethean rebel of romantic tradition. But the question whether Satan had any ancestors has hardly been raised, or has been dismissed by...
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Criticism
- Samuel Johnson (essay date 1781)
- William Vaughn Moody (essay date 1899)
- C. S. Lewis (essay date 1942)
- Helen Gardner (essay date 1948)
- Arthur E. Barker (essay date 1949)
- Geoffrey Hartman (essay date 1958)
- Frank Kermode (essay date 1960)
- Don Cameron Allen (essay date 1961)
- B. Rajan (essay date 1964)
- Michael Fixler (essay date 1969)
- Barbara K. Lewalski (essay date 1974)
- Louis L. Martz (essay date 1980)
- Joan Malory Webber (essay date 1980)
- Balachandra Rajan (essay date 1983)
- Diane McColley (essay date 1988)
- Michael Wilding (essay date 1995)
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