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Title:
-08_Milton^s Art ~ His Plane of Inspiration and Shakespeare^s.htm
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-08_Milton^s Art ~ His Plane of Inspiration and Shakespeare^s.htm
VII
Milton's Art
His "Plane" of Inspiration and Shakespeare's
Now we may note a few examples of Milton's art. On the more obvious yet none the less genuinely expressive level we have the four rivers of Hell conjured up, each by the appropriate phrase elaborating the etymological connotation of the river's Greek name and running in the right psychologically effective rhythm of vowels and consonants:
Abhorrèd Styx, the flood of deadly hate;
Sad Acheron of sorrow, black and deep;
Cocytus, named of lamentation loud
Heard on the rueful stream; fierce Phlegeton,
Whose waves of torrent fire i
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/The Inspiration of Paradise Lost/precontent.htm
The Inspiration of Paradise Lost
The Inspiration of
Paradise Lost
AMAL KIRAN (K.D. SETHNA)
The Integral Life Foundation
P.O. Box 239
Waterford CT. 06385
USA
First published 1994
(Typeset in 10.5/13 Palatino)
© Amal Kiran (K.D. Sethna)
Published by
The Integral Life Foundation, U.S.A.
Printed at Sri Aurobindo Ashram Press, Pondicherry
PRINTED IN INDIA
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/The Inspiration of Paradise Lost/The Complex Theme of Paradise Lost.htm
XI
The Complex Theme of Paradise Lost
At the very outset the problem of the theme of Paradise Lost is bedevilled by the figure of Satan. So mightily alive - indeed the sole living character in the poem - is the Arch-demon that all other concerns than his are from the dramatic viewpoint dwarfed. And, if by the theme is meant whatever grips us most out of a work, Paradise Lost has its burning centre in the fortunes of Satan. Whether Milton intended it or no, the Fall of Satan, his fight against God and Man, his heroism or villainy, his success or failure are the main interest of the epic. But Satan's doings have evidently to be seen with chief re
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/The Inspiration of Paradise Lost/Milton, Macaulay and Sri Aurobindo.htm
II
Milton, Macaulay and Sri Aurobindo
I hope my introductory words have toned up the reader to an
interest in Paradise Lost and in the difficult job I have taken on myself
under the influence of the ardours and rigours of Milton's epic inspiration. But
before I actually start, let me evoke two pictures in which our poet does not
directly figure yet which may aid our minds better to appreciate him.
Go back to 1834. A British ship
is on way to India. In those days it used to take five months to make the voyage
and there were many hazards: the ships were far more at the mercy of storms than
our modern luxury-liners. And this particul
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/The Inspiration of Paradise Lost/The Metaphysics of Paradise Lost.htm
XII
The Metaphysics of Paradise Lost
B. Rajan, in his important study, Paradise Lost and the Seventeenth Century Reader, has observed that Paradise Lost was meant to be an epic of the Christian world and therefore aimed at the utmost general conformity to the body of universal Christian belief. The words "utmost general" are, of course, the operative ones. Rajan would hardly deny unorthodox traces. Milton, being what he was, would certainly not violate his own integrity by quite submerging his differences from universal Christianity; but, according to Rajan, he would never let them obtrude in a work which was intended to be a moral and religious po
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/The Inspiration of Paradise Lost/Milton^s Spaciousness of Soul and Sound.htm
-02_Milton^s Spaciousness of Soul and Sound.htm
I
Milton's Spaciousness of Soul and
Sound
Paradise Lost - here we
have an epic which would seem almost to make paradise worth losing, since
without that loss Milton could not have sung so sublimely and almost regained
Paradise for poetry-mad people like the present writer. But more than three
hundred years after its composition, years during which a lot of poetry-mad
people have had their say about it, it is difficult to avoid making just a
rehash of past critical comments. Yet, difficult or no, if one feels that the
last word has not yet been spoken, one must make the attempt to bring new
aspects forward or at least to present certa
Title:
-10_Early Milton and What Paradise Lost Might Have Been ~ Clues from Early Sri Aurobindo.htm
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IX
Early Milton and What Paradise Lost Might Have Been
Clues from Early Sri Aurobindo
Savitri is in many respects unMiltonic. However, Sri Aurobindo's early blank verse which assimilates several influences into a varied vigorous originality mingles Paradise Lost most with the chief immediate influence - Stephen Phillips's Christ in Hades and Marpessa - and the principal background influence - Kalidasa's Vicramorvasie. And this blank verse is of particular interest because of a certain question raised by Sri Aurobindo in connection with Milton: "One might speculate on what we might have had
Title:
-09_Poetry of the Thought Mind and Overhead Poetry ~ Milton^s Paradise Lost and Sri Aurobindo^s Savitri.htm
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-09_Poetry of the Thought Mind and Overhead Poetry ~ Milton^s Paradise Lost and Sri Aurobindo^s Savitri.htm
VIII
Poetry of the Thought-Mind and "Overhead Poetry"
Milton's Paradise Lost and Sri Aurobindo's Savitri
Milton knew himself to be for "an audience fit, though few." It is impossible for many to address him in their minds as he makes Eve address Adam:
O sole in whom my thoughts find all repose,
My glory, my perfection! 1
But in a poetic sense Milton can be likened to Adam and regarded as our glory and perfection if we interpret from the standpoint of poetic psychology the phrase:
O sole in whom my thoughts find all repose.
For, Milton is the
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Science Materialism Mysticism/The Scientific Mind and the Mystical Outlook.htm
The Scientific Mind and the Mystical Outlook
The scientific mind and the mystical outlook figure in the
popular imagination as eternal enemies. Both are felt to be
important but somehow irreconcilable in ultimate matters. It
is worth inquiring whether the supposed irreconcilableness
is anything other than a superficial impression.
We may remark at the very beginning that, historically,
science and religion have not always stood in stark opposition. And most significantly the absence of stark opposition
has been with regard to the science that is the very foundation of all sciences: physics. What is called classical or
Newtonian physics was
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Amal Kiran (K D Sethna)/English/Science Materialism Mysticism/Did Classical Physics Bear Out Materialism.htm
Science
Materialism Mysticism
by
Amal
Kiran (K. D. Sethna)
Foreword
to the second Edition
The
Clear Ray Trust, Pondicherry, is happy to publish the second
Edition of Amal Kiran's book "Science Materialism,
Mysticism".
The
Issue Materialism versus Mysticism now seems to be an important
point of intellectual debate and this book throws a considerable
amount of light on the subject and helps to clarity many concepts
relating to the subject.
Did
Classical Physics Bear Out Materialism?
One of the
distinguishing marks of the present century is the revolution in
physics. This revolution has swept away many of the old