Paradise
Lost by John Milton is a veritable
landmark book within the chronicles of humanity’s past. Milton’s imagination
was as boundless as it was incisive, and he paints a masterful world in which
good and evil battle for the fate of the world.
Undoubtedly
one of the best epics of all-time, Milton’s Paradise Lost, features
a plethora of allusions the likes of which haven’t been replicated since, and
just might not be replicated ever.
Milton’s
constant inferences to theological and classical underpinnings of society are
one of the greatest components of this masterpiece. Every line is
incisively thought out, and weaves seamlessly into the next manifesting a
masterpiece of literature that’s as thought-provoking as it is deep.
The diction
used in Milton’s time might be something that could turn certain readers off,
but the notations at the bottom of each page of this particular version help
the reader traverse through this fascinating and fierce fictional world that
Milton crafted rather seamlessly.
Admittedly,
an epic like this will demand a lot from the reader, and rightly so. It’s
a quintessential milestone in history. Given the complex range of characters it
employs and fuses with philosophical
underpinnings of what many of humanity’s deeper yearnings and concerns are,
only helps catapult this work beyond the rest in its field.
Ruminating
upon its breadth, scope and complexity, it’s a pity that more works aren’t as
well thought out as this. The standards Milton set upon himself to
accomplish this piece should be held in high respect, for it is a testament to
what human creativity can achieve when it sets its mind to it. And that
is priceless, just like this book is.
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