Paradise Lost - John Milton
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Studying Paradise Lost is tough. It's literature's answer to quantum physics. Shakespeare, had he not been dead when Milton was composing PL, might have been talking about PL when he said, "Study is like the heaven's glorious sun that will not be deep searched with saucy looks" (Love's Labour's Lost). But keep this in mind: once you've studied Paradise Lost, you can analyze anything! Have fun!
Related Files
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Creation Poems that Influenced Milton
Here is a brief look at some of the texts that influenced Milton's ideas about creation.
Related Links
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Paradise Lost as a hypertext
This is a great way to read the text. It provides a useful glossary. Please do not use the BHS printers to print this text. -
Paradise Lost Renascence Edition
This text is based on the 1667 publication, and only includes ten (rather than the twelve that you are reading) books. -
Oxford University's Paradise Lost
You can look here to see images of early English texts! It's great fun! -
Narcissus Myth
Here is a link to a description of the Narcissus myth. Milton alludes to this myth when he describes Eve's moment of self-awareness.