May 26, 2019

Everything Between the Dirt and the Sky: Defenses of Poetry in the Romantic Age


In this essay I will explore the broad definition of what it means for poetry to be “Romantic.” We will move from broad definitions to brief exploration of the political, economic, and philosophic undercurrents in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, and how these apply to contemporaneous evaluations of the form from practitioners.
Periodization as a definitional proposition can be hard to do. The easiest thing to do is look at the calendar and draw some sort of dividing line. There are handy transitions that we can take advantage of. Centuries change to nice round numbers. Monarchs die. Thus, we can call Marlow and Shakespeare, along with Spenser Elizabethans, even though the latter two poets outlived Elizabeth. This has an equally difficult corollary in that sometimes the monarchs won’t die. Victoria lived seemingly forever, as has the current Elizabeth. A more fruitful way of looking at the differences between one set of texts and another and finding commonalities and differences.
What makes a text “Romantic”? There is no one simple definition. Looking for guidance in the Penguin dictionary of Literary terms, the editors cite A. O. Lovejoy, who noted that ‘romantic’ has been so broadly applied that “it means nothing at all” (767).  The entry further brings to light Fredrich Schlegel’s first definition of the ‘romantisch’ as “that which depicts” emotional matter in an imaginative form (768). It is this imaginative turn, the retrospective turn inward that from our perspective is what truly separates the Romantics from their forebears. M. H. Abrams famously called this the divide between the mirror and the lamp, where prior poetry was focused on the mimetic function but the romantic turn is the inward exploration of the self, but as Zaiter notes, it still drew inspiration from Renaissance and earlier Middle Age work (34). But defining a genre is not entirely about influences and the direction they are looking. There are several aspects of the poetic subject that we can think of when we think of the ‘romantics’. As we turn to the dictionary again, we can see highlighted the focus on nature and wild scenery, along with how they are effected with the subjective turn in how these natural scenes are evaluated by the self – the poet as narrator or stand-in for the nominal speaker (Cuddon 769-70).  For me, the ultimate expression of Romanticism can be seen in the Prelude, as Wordsworth elevates what is a long walk in the mountains becomes this sublime, cathartic moment as he experiences Mount Blanc:
. . . That day we first
Beheld the summit of Mont Blanc, and griev'd
To have a soulless image on the eye
Which had usurp'd upon a living thought
That never more could be: (Vl 452-6)

           The romantic poet is not just walking in the woods but experiencing nature as if they are the first to have ever encountered the snow-capped peaks. And in the subjective way, they are – the art of representation in painting or even in words being limited, there is nothing like being there in the moment and even having crossed the Alps:
Imagination! lifting up itself
Before the eye and progress of my Song
Like an unfather'd vapour; here that Power,
In all the might of its endowments, came
Athwart me; (Vl 525-9)

“This is nature!” The poet says, and points around him and within him as he collapses in wonderment. That is the move to romanticism, the detailing of that journey both in physical space, but also in terms of the inner journey.
                If we can define stylistic and subjective characteristics that outline what the Romantic move was and what a good representation of the form is, the question next task would be to examine what it is that is driving the turn inwards. We can see Romanticism as a reaction not just to the neoclassical immediate forebears stylistically, but also as a reaction to the larger economic and political framework that defines the ground and atmosphere in which these poets are writing.  For me, there are two main drivers of what created these reactions.
                The first larger issue to look at is the rise of capitalism. Adam Smith published the Wealth of Nations in 1776, and even by then he as able to observe the growing capitalist classes as they took advantage of displaced peasants claimed that the English genius was in the division of labor. He famously examined a “pin factory” near his hometown to see how the new economic system was able to be much more productive and make more goods for the markets of the world. The ultimate effect of that greater division of labor and the continued enclosure acts meant that there was greater concentration of workers in the cities, pulled both from the English and Scottish countryside as well as the near abroad like Ireland. This concentrate of people created the conditions we see in Friedrich Engels’s examination of the Manchester of 1842, where he notes that the life is hard, where the working-class lives in “enfeebled conditions” that cause people to “age prematurely and die early” (116). In his work, he sees that conditions were such that there is a mortality rate for children of the working classes where 57 percent of their children die before they turn five. This is opposed to the upper classes, where a still frighteningly high 20 percent of children will die (120). Added to the privations of the living conditions, many children are put to work, so that a child of nine is sent to work in the mill for six and a half hours daily, increasing to twelve-hour days when they become what we would call teenagers (160). Children, in their masses, were forced to become adults in terms of entering the workforce because of need in their families for another worker and the lack of formal education options for most lower-class children, while the adults die young and all the workers live close upon each other, in the cold and damp, often in sewage and trash as there was little organized collection of refuse. And though the Manchester of Engels postdates our period some, there is a direct line between the pin factory and humans living in their filth as food for the beast of capital. This romantic turn against the city and into the countryside is best illustrated by Blake’s crossing of the two in his 1810 poem “Jerusalem” where the new Jerusalem is troubled to be built near the “dark Satanic Mills” but instead these should be swept from the earth to build anew “In Englands green & pleasant Land”.
                Aside from the economic context of the growing, the other trigger for this interior move was the American and French Revolutions and the political and philosophical environment that helped lead to the revolution as well as the intellectual reaction to the overturning of the prior order. It was not as if the English did not have their own experience in overthrowing kings, but Charles lost his head but after a Cromwellian interlude, the monarchy was re-established, so the world order did not change. The French revolution, on the other hand, was one where as Marx notes “abolished feudal property in favor of bourgeoise property” (Manifesto 25), where you can point to the same sort of motivation in the American Revolution as many of the key figures revered as founding fathers were wealthy landowners. During the eighteenth century, there was a noted move from an acceptance of the Hobbesian state where any government is good as it is the intervention in the overwhelming war of all against all. The move to a more Lockean acceptance of the natural rights of man and his “Life, Liberty, and Property” being paralleled in the US declaration of independence as “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”. (“Rousseau”). These natural rights stem from a centering of the self that begins with Descartes’s famous “cogito ergo sum” and run through to Kant and Rousseau. In his essay “The Mirror, the Lamp, and the Lens,” reframing Abrams’s dichotomy, Garrett Green centers Kant as the philosopher of choice in describing the Romantic’s move against the neoclassicals and their forebears: “ Kant breaks with the long tradition going back to Plato, according to which the imagination is mimetic, in the unoriginal business of re-presenting something `original.' Accordingly, for Kant the imagination takes on an active, as opposed to a merely passive, role; it is no longer simply dependent on a prior original but assumes an ‘originating' role of its own” (77).  What we see is that the Romantic subject and poet did not spring forth out of nothing. There were important political, economic, and philosophic precursors that helped give rise to the Romantic poets, their form, and structure. Without all the various revolutions going on around these writers, their crafts and subject matters were an extension of the self that was created and nurtured at a social level, especially for well-off men and women who had seen the current order shift under their feet and massive change that people in our time are used to, but which was only beginning to accelerate as the centuries turned from the eighteenth to the nineteenth.
Of course, it can feel like a big hand-wave to say that what Romanticism is was just a reaction to the enlightenment, the industrial revolution and the French and American political revolutions. It suggests the Carl Sagan aphorism that to first make a pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. Those events would have happened and there would have been some artistic response, there is no Teleology that leads directly to Romanticism. There was even a worry that the freedom represented in the ideals of the French Revolutions’ “Liberté, Equalité, Fraternité” were in danger of regressing in the English Monarchy, as Cook notes in his introduction to Hazlitt’s work, “The subsequent reversal of a historical process which seemed to guarantee liberty was accompanied by the collapse of a more patriotic confidence that Britain was tending toward a state which guaranteed the freedom and equality of its subjects (“Introduction” xiv).  Thankfully for our analysis we do not have to take these top-down approaches and try to sus out meaning from style and focus, with the Romantic’s inward subjectivity drawing our attention. The poets and critics were discussing these issues asking what is poetry and why is it important and how do we differentiate from poetry and prose? This was more an ongoing conversation, and less about the creation of a school, as “Romantics did not know that was what they were.” It was the business of the critics of our age, who have categorized the romantics into lake  School’  (Wordsworth,  Coleridge  and  Southey),  the  ‘Demonic School’ (most notoriously, Byron), the ‘Cockney School’  (Leigh  Hunt  and  Keats)” (Perry qtd in Zaiter 34). In the last section of this essay, we will explore these conversations through published work focusing on Wordsworth and Shelley.
The first thing in looking at works such as Wordsworth’s “Preface to Lyrical Ballads” or Shelley’s “Defence of Poetry” is that they act as a sort of ars poetica of the self, and as a larger defense of the form in general. What we have to avoid as critics is the intentional fallacy, knowing that the poetic texts these authors write may be reflective of the intentions, but the work themselves are not fully explained by the essays. How much their intentions are reflected in an Ozymandias or the quivering at Mount Blanc in the prelude are outside the scope of this essay, instead the desire is to look at what they were trying to do – to understand romanticism through the eyes of the poets themselves as they understood their project.
In his Preface, Wordsworth notes the same difficulty in a formal introduction and defense as we looked at earlier, knowing all of the social forces behind his poetry:
For, to treat the subject with the clearness and coherence of which it is susceptible, it would be necessary to give a full account of the present state of the public taste in this country, and to determine how far this taste is healthy or depraved; which, again, could not be determined, without pointing out in what manner language and the human mind act and re-act on each other, and without retracing the revolutions, not of literature alone, but likewise of society itself. (645-6)

But he does make an effort at showing that his main purpose in writing the poems in the Lyrical ballads as an attempt to show what is the common life, with language as “really used by men” (646). What Wordsworth claims to do is to use the rustic life as the subject matter, because of the rustic life’s greater simplicity, with a language that is at it most pure as the people living in rustic life are less influenced by “social vanity” and have less pretentions (647). By writing with this language and this subject, then the poetry can gain the high explosion of what makes good poetry to Wordsworth, the “spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”(648). He juxtaposes the rustic with the city life, which dumbs people down, as we saw in many ways with the industrial revolution, “the increasing accumulation of men in cities, where the uniformity of their occupations produces a craving for extraordinary incident” (649). For Wordsworth this lowered diction is important in his task, as he wants to keep it “near the language of men” (650) and is hammered home at several points in the essay. The author then turns from looking at the poetic subject and the poetic language to looking at the role of the poet. For Wordsworth, the poet is one who speaking to man, but with greater sensitivity: “he has acquired a greater readiness and power in expressing what he thinks and feels, and especially those thoughts and feelings which, by his own choice, or from the structure of his own mind, arise in him without immediate external excitement.” (652). From this rustic language, telling man the story of man the Poet synthesizes all, “He considers man and nature as essentially adapted to each other, and the mind of man as naturally the mirror of the fairest and most interesting properties of nature” (654).The poet and the poet’s work weaves together all of human society so that everything is contained in poetry and “Poetry is the first and last of all knowledge” (655). It becomes a large claim. From looking at the language and events of the rustic man, to the overflowing feelings to encircling the whole of human knowledge, if true, it is a heavy burden to carry.
                As it is with Woodsworth, so it is with Shelley.  Shelley was writing in response to Thomas Love Peacock’s “The Four Ages of Poetry,” where Peacock argue that the Poetic genre more or less begins in golden ages and then declines down to the age of brass, a retrograde slide to barbarism, a return to nature, and a “second childhood of poetry” (689). Shelley famously ends his essay “A Defence of Poetry” with the line “Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world” (717) which ties nicely into the strong claim that Wordsworth makes for the poets. Shelley’s essay is more wide ranging, making a strong case for a broader definition of poetry than even Wordsworth allows, to the point of perhaps being overly broad, as John Ross Baker notes, “What does poetry not include? Toward the end of the Defence appears the culmination of what has been implicit all along: there are hardly any limits to "poetry," for "It is at once the centre and circumference of knowledge" (438). Once you start to dig, the reader does find other parallels with Wordsworth, as “Man in society, with all his passions and his pleasures, next becomes the object of the passions and pleasures of man,” as Shelly tracks man through the mimetic function of poetry, and there are those can experience the beautiful “in excess are poets, in the most universal sense of the word; and the pleasure resulting from the manner in which they express the influence of society or nature upon their own minds.” This function turns though, through poetry. Where for Woodsworth, Man was the mirror, for Shelley “poetry is a mirror which makes beautiful that which is distorted,” it is the revealer of hidden truth and beauty, that which “makes familiar objects be ass if they were not familiar.” Further, it “communicates all the pleasure which men are capable of receiving.” Shelly follows Wordsworth down the path where the poet and poetry are not just the distorted reflection of the world, but the creators of new knowledge. The port “creates new materials of knowledge, and power, and pleasure; by the other it engenders in the mind a desire to reproduce and arrange them according to a certain rhythm and order which may be called the beautiful and the good.” Also the poets are in parallel in that the poetic act is spontaneous and cannot be willed, as Shelly says, “A man cannot say, ‘I will create poetry,’” the overflowing of emotion is not under control of the active mind but when the poet does “he is the author of the highest wisdom, pleasure, virtue, and glory”.          
What we see with Woodsworth as well as with Shelly is that an examination of the poetic form takes the poet from the savage and rustic until the poet is the one who is inscribing all of the world’s knowledge. Circling back around as we look at the texts, and try to think of the relationships that is formed between the political and social milieu and the texts laying out their supposed program, what we find is an optimism in Shelley and Wordsworth that is not there in the work of Peacock (depending on how tongue-in-cheek you evaluate his work). By approaching man at the individual level there remit of the poet grows to encompassing all knowledge. In another turn the growth of capitalism created a different form of man as the individual, one who exists as a commoditized worker, so we can see the tension in the different forms of selves created. The critic can ask again, “What is Romanticism” and through looking at the texts of Shelley and Wordsworth, we can answer – it is everything possible between the dirt and the sky but you must start in the dirt. The problem with that answer is that it does not fit nicely in the dictionary of literary terms under the proper heading.
               



Bibliography

Abrams, M H. The Mirror and the Lamp: Romantic Theory and the Critical Tradition. New York: Oxford University Press, 1953. Print.
Baker, John Ross. “Poetry and Language in Shelley's Defence of Poetry.” The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, vol. 39, no. 4, 1981, pp. 437–449. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/430243.
Blake, William. “Jerusalem [‘And Did Those Feet in Ancient Time’] by William Blake.” Poetry Foundation, Poetry Foundation, www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/54684/jerusalem-and-did-those-feet-in-ancient-time.
Cuddon, John A., and C. E. Preston. The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. Penguin Books, 1999.
Eagleton, Terry, and Drew Milne. Marxist Literary Theory: a Reader. Blackwell Publishers, 2006.
Engels, Friedrich, and David McLellan. The Condition of the Working Class in England. Oxford University Press, 2009.
Ford, Thomas H. "The Romantic Political Economy of Reading: Or, Why Wordsworth Thought Adam Smith was the Worst Critic Ever." ELH, vol. 80 no. 2, 2013, pp. 575-595. Project MUSE, doi:10.1353/elh.2013.0023
Garrett Green (2002) The Mirror, the Lamp, and the Lens, Ars Disputandi, 2:1,119-130, DOI: 10.1080/15665399.2002.10819743
Hazlitt, William, and Jon Cook. William Hazlitt: Selected Writings. Oxford University Press, 1998.
Marx, Karl, et al. The Communist Manifesto. Monthly Review Press, 1998.
McEathron, Scott. “Wordsworth, Lyrical Ballads, and the Problem of Peasant Poetry.” Nineteenth-Century Literature, vol. 54, no. 1, 1999, pp. 1–26. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2902995.
Peacock, Thomas Love. “The Four Ages of Poetry”. The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism. 8th ed. Eds. Vincent B. Leitch et al. Vol A. New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2001. 684-694. Print.
‘Rousseau.’ Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, www.iep.utm.edu/rousseau/.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe. “A Defence of Poetry by Percy Bysshe Shelley.” Poetry Foundation, Poetry Foundation, www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/69388/a-defence-of-poetry.
Smith, Adam. The Wealth of Nations. Bantam Books, 2003.
Whalley, George. "Preface to Lyrical Ballads: A Portent." University of Toronto Quarterly, vol. 25 no. 4, 1956, pp. 467-483. Project MUSE, muse.jhu.edu/article/557958.
Wordsworth, William. “Preface to Lyrical Ballads, with Pastoral and Other Poems.” The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism. 8th ed. Eds. Vincent B. Leitch et al. Vol A. New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2001. 645-667. Print.
Wordsworth, William. “The Prelude”. 1805. Ed. Ernest de Selincourt. Oxford University Press 1970
Zaiter, Walid A. “Romanticism in Context: Shelley’s and Keats’s Verse and Prose: Keats’s Letters and Ode to a Nightingale, Shelley’s Defense of Poetry and Skylark”. International Journal of Comparative Literature & Translation Studies; Footscray Vol. 6, Iss. 3, (2018): 34-38. DOI: 10.7575/aiac.ijclts. v.6n.3p.34

May 10, 2019

Hey Now

Sometime in the mid-90s, I was stuck at a gas station out of Flagstaff. I thought I had enough gas but the mountains were harder on my mileage than I was expecting. I didn’t have any money and I was panicked.

I was trying to get to Phoenix where my Grandmother was in hospice and I was told that she didn’t have much time.

The area was pretty desolate, but there was enough traffic I was hopeful that I could find enough good Samaritans to scrape together enough cash for a full tank. Remember, this was when a full tank costs like twelve bucks.

Most people just did that thing where they pretended they didn’t hear you as they walked by. But I remember this one guy. Super 90s guy: Kind of chubby, goatee, silken acrylic shirt. Spiky hair, pretty sure the tips were frosted. I asked him if he could spare some change for gas.

And this guy turns towards me, makes full eye contact and says “What a concept! I could use a little fuel myself. And we could all use a little change” and then he turned to get into his car.

I didn’t think about it until a couple years later, when I heard that song. That fucking song.

January 21, 2019

Heere may men seen that dremes been to drede: The Dream from Chaucer to Milton

As A. C. Hamilton writes in his introduction to the Faerie Queen, Spenser is “our contemporary,” one who “who need not have been recognizable to his first readers as their contemporary, for we recreate his poem within our culture, in our image rather than theirs […] It speaks to us directly in our time” (1). Classic texts are in dialogue with each generation of reader both as a creation of the past, but as mirrors to our contemporary selves. This is the context I want to pull on one the thematic threads of these texts to look at the think about them as texts themselves and in dialogue with current readers by mirroring  timeless themes.  In the remainder of the essay, we will consider the role of dreams and explain what they add to Chaucer’s "The Nun’s Priest’s Tale", Book 1, canto 1 of Spenser’s The Faerie Queene, and Book V of Milton’s Paradise Lost. Specifically, we will see how dreams in all three texts relate to themes of gender and believability, the existence of free will, and how dreams are interpreted.
The conceit of the larger Canterbury Tales is the narrator joins a company of twenty-nine pilgrims traveling to the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket in Canterbury. Each of these pilgrims will tell two stories on the way to Canterbury and two on the way back. The reader does not see the full Canterbury Tales. Chaucer had the misfortune of dying before he finished his work, and there is controversy over if the initial plan in the prologue was scaled back as Chaucer was in composition of the work (“Introduction” x). What we do have in existence are several complete tales: from a Knight telling of love and a Miller telling tales of seduction. The structure of the Canterbury tales allows Chaucer as the poet to inhabit many different narrative voices and to show off his virtuosity in terms of genre, writing from romance to epic to mock epic beast fables.
The reader is introduced to the dreamer Chauntecleer and his wife in a prologue where the Knight is asking for a counterpoint to the Monk’s tale. Instead of tragedy, he wants to see a story of someone not brought low, but “As whan a man hath been in povre estaat, / And clymbeth up and wexeth fortunate” (VII.3572-3). This segues into the introduction of a cottage yard, where an old woman lives with her daughters, but that is just the setting. The center of the tale is Chauntecleer. He is described in heroic terms with a fine red comb and a black beak. The reader also meets Pertelote, a very lovely hen as well and they were both in love, even though Chauntecleer has many concubines. The action of the tale can be boiled down simply. One night, Chauntecleer has a bad dream where a beast “bitwixe yellow and reed” (VII.3699) comes upon him and wanted to kill him. Later, when he is happily walking around, he has a “sorweful cas” (VII.4002) and that night a fox comes into the yard. The fox flatters our hero by saying what a good singer he is, and when Chauntecleer goes to sing he is taken up the neck and grabbed by the fox. But that is not the end of our hero. The table turns when the fox is convinced to turn towards his pursuers and brag that Chauntecleer is his. Chauntecleer flees and the narrator tells the reader that the ultimate moral is that these are things that happen when you “truste on flaterye” (VII.4234).
A summary of the plot, however, glosses over the key event in the story. What is at the center of the tale is the dream of Chauntecleer and his conversation with Pertelote about the ultimate meaning of that dream with the beast. D. P Baker calls this “a playful comment on a particular philosophical and theological problem of recurrent interest to Chaucer: namely, the question of whether future events are still undecided ('contingent') or happen by necessity, especially given God's foreknowledge of the future” (236). In the conversation there are two different interpretations of what a dream means. On the side of Chauntecleer, he runs through many stories telling his wife about how one should pay attention to the meanings of the dreams in terms of premonitions. He gathers evidence from the sources and tells stories of travelers who were separated and then one traveler dreamed of his friend warning him and he was able to show his murder. There is another story of other travelers, and dreams of a ship falling apart, and being saved by listening to the dreams. On the other side of the argument is Pertelote. She has her own authorities to cite, but she is not arguing for a Chauntecleer as a seer, but as one of physical causation. She tells her husband that he needs a laxative and get his humors in balance, as Pratt notes, “both Rhazes and Petrus de Abano state that too much "red cholera" causes men to dream of strife” (544).
  What the tale does is present a ambiguity in how to read it. Chauntecleer has his dream and has his argument about why he should trust this dream, but ultimately, lets the argument drop in favor of his lover’s more physical argument in favor of humoral imbalances. The problem is that for the reader, there is no clear right or wrong. The woman is listed to, but at the expense of not being prepared when later the fox is in the cottage yard and chasing after Chauntecleer. This sets her up as either negligent or as a traitor to the man, prefiguring the fall. But the fall is not purely biblical, though foregrounded in the text (VII.4054-5). There is a mirroring in terms of pride. When the fox comes into the yard, he can trick Chauntecleer by his pride as well as Chauntecleer tricking the fox. The ultimate result being that Chauntecleer was right to be wary of the beast in his dream, but also that the dream did not set reality in stone. He was, through his own wiliness, able to change the facts of his premonitions. For the world of the cottage yard, dreams are not destiny, but should be heeded.
Like the Canterbury Tales, Spenser’s The Faerie Queen was an ambitious text that was pared back from its initial designs as it saw its way into print. In the “Letter to Raleigh,” a preface to the first edition, Spence mapped out his plan as “I labour to pourtraict in Arthure, before he was king, the image of a brave knight, perfected in the twelue priaute morall vertues.” (Spenser 715). From this initial ambition, the completed text as it comes down to us is in six books, with two more short cantos added at the end.
There are several dreamers in Spenser’s poem, but here we want to explore the Redcrosse Knight, the personifications of “Holinesse”. The larger arc of his story is the whole of book one, where he is tasked with killing a dragon (I.i.3). This dragon and the task will win him honor from Gloriana, the queen of the book, and the alternate-reality Queen Elizabeth I, to which the work is dedicated.  In the first cantos, we can find Redcrosse wandering with a woman and a dwarf. After a breaking storm, they find they are in a forest and by a cave, in which they find Error, “A monster vile, whom God and man does hate” (I.i.13.7). Once the beast is defeated, they continue until they meet a man who seems to be a hermit who invites them to rest at his home. While there, our heroes fall asleep and the reader finds that the hermit is in fact a sorcerer.  The sorcerer, Archimago, calls spirits to tempt Redcrosse. The first gives him a dream of “lustful play”, the second takes the form of Una, “Her all in white he clad” (VI.i.45.8), to beguile our hero.
Spenser’s first book sets up some allegorical tales for the reader. Redcrosse, as the representation of Holiness, cannot be wholly holy without having faced temptation and turned away from it. It is in the first canto where he battles with Error and her whole brood, where it is noted her “vomit full of books and papers was,” (I.i.20), noted in the gloss as both catholic and pagan tracts as well as the books of the sorcerer Archimago later in the canto. By defeating this error and going on the way to meet Archimago himself in the guise of the hermit who is alone biding his beads like the rosary, the reader sees the dichotomy of the Roman Catholic church and that of the Church of England headed by the Queen, the font herself of Holiness.
Archimago’s attempt to beguile and tempt Redcrosse are a second potential way to pull the Holy Knight away from his quest. Like the dream of Chauntecleer, it hinges on interpretation. If Redcrosse believes either his dream, or his vision upon waking are real, then he has been removed from his quest of Holiness and of killing the dragon. There is an interesting turn in that he dismisses the first instance of waking up next to Una after his dream but falls for the false image and runs off. Redcrosse was able to trust in his faith and ignore the dream but was unable to deduce the truth behind the evidence of his eyes, as he did when not seeing through the hermit to begin with in this section of the poem. The episode at the hermitage is also one that brings into questions of omniscience and free will for the characters, as Broaddus notes, “the action in the episode at Archimago’s hermitage says as much about how God allows Satan to tempt and entrap one of his elect as preparation for the time when he will extend the inward calling as it does about Redcrosse’s culpability” (582). Archimago as an agent of evil can separate Redcrosse from Una though his machinations. The challenge to the faith is a question of Theodicy as this evil exists in a world where Holiness should be attainable, but it is only through tribulation that it can be reached, a holiness that needs to be earned through actions and not automatically conferred upon the characters.
The last of our dreamers comes from Paradise Lost. In this poem, John Milton takes a familiar story in the western canon even today and dramatizes it. He takes the first couple pages of Genesis and makes it more real, by doing what the author of Genesis fails to do – he takes Adam and Even and makes them human. Milton also makes Satan human in a way that makes him a more interesting and complex character than that of the absolutely flip side of the all good creator God presented in the bible.  The poem opens after the war in heaven, Satan and his allies are trying to figure out what to do next. Instead of fighting again, they take another tack to trick man. Entering the garden of man, Satan tempts Eve to defy the Lord’s one commandment, to not eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge. Adam then follows Eve in disobedience, and their innocence is lost and both tempter and tempted are punished, Adam and Eve expelled from paradise.
What is interesting structurally about the poem is that it is bookended by two falls. The first fall is the fall of Lucifer and the third of the heavenly host that followed Lucifer in the poem in his desire to no longer serve the God. The fall at the end being the second disobedience where Adam and Eve, tempted by the first sinner, become aware of their humanity and must venture out into the postlapsarian world. Satan’s fall prefigures the fall of our first parents and leads to it directly, as Satan is the first sinner and the first tempter.  David Mikics brings to attention Stanley Fish’s insistence "the fall is not a moment in the poem, that it has, instead, always-already "occurred," as a frame for our every interpretive move. But Milton's point is precisely to dramatize the fall, to act as if it were not always-already there” (33). What this structure does with the familiar narrative is to create a dramatic irony for the reader. We already know about the fact of the fall, but how it comes to be is a surprise in the more developed world of Paradise Lost as compared to its biblical sources.
How it comes to be starts in a dream. Satan, in the garden in book IV, transforms himself into a toad to whisper in Eve’s ear. The dream, as she relates it to Adam, being one where she finds herself alone and follows a voice to the tree of knowledge. There she finds and angel who eats from the tree and eats the fruit takes Even on a flight above the earth with him (V.31-93).  Eve’s dream is a prefiguration of the ultimate fall and brings into question what it means to know good and evil in a world without sin as of yet. Here the plot again hinges upon the interpretation of what that dream means, as Adam comforts Eve with the knowledge that humans are a creature capable of reason. Milton shows that there is a knowledge of good and evil: “Evil into the mind of god or man / May come and go, so unapproved, and leave” (V.117-8). Here Adam is dismissive of Eve’s dream by allowing a knowledge of evil to be possible. It is not through the mind that the fall happens but only in the act of eating the fruit when the fall truly comes. Like Redcrosse, Adam and Eve have been tasked in the poem to be people, but also symbols. Adam and Eve are the first sinners, but there is a problem of how you know sin, and what is wrong and understand what consequences are without having a sense of the dichotomy between right and wrong. Redcrosse had to be challenged in his faith as Adam and Eve must be challenged in their obedience, but it is more a gradation. As Howison notes, “When Milton's God forbids the tree, it is clear that he
does not, as Satan assumes, also forbid knowledge, for knowledge is in fact provided - in other ways - to the pre-lapsarian Adam and Eve” (530-1). What it means to have knowledge of good and evil is to make the sinner more culpable in a way because then they do understand just what it means to be evil, even if “what in sleep thou didst abhor to dream, / Waking thou never wilt consent to do' (v, 120- 1). Eve’s dream can be read either as a prophecy or a warning against falling into temptation, as well as the temptation itself since the author of the dream was Satan himself. Were this read as a warning by Eve or interpreted as such by Adam, perhaps our ancestors could have avoided the fall. Unfortunately for them, the reader carries with them the knowledge of the fall. Had they not fallen, the poem would never have been written. Man, as Adam said, has reason, but he also has free will, the best and the worst of our gifts from our creator.







Works Cited

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Milton, John, and Alastair Fowler. Paradise Lost. Longman, 1998.
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