Lecture Description
In this second lecture on Paradise Regained, the three temptations are examined and Milton's unusual departure from their account in the Gospel of Luke is discussed. The poem's tacit assertion of the superiority of knowledge and ethics over action is probed. Considerable time is spent examining the Son's rejection of classical literature. Finally, Book Four's allusion to the riddle of the sphinx serves as a springboard to a consideration of the poem's Oedipal elements.
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 Smile
- 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.)
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.
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