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Paradise Lost

 

            In John Milton's Paradise Lost, Milton paints you a mental picture of what his garden of .
             He uses beautiful and well used metaphors, that transforms into art right in front .
             of your very own eyes. Milton tends to capture your imagination with his style of word grouping, .
             that almost puts you in a trance while reading his poem. You can see every word that Milton uses .
             like it was being broadcast on a television set in your mind. For example, "In at the window .
             climbs, or o"er the tiles; so clomb this first grand Thief into God's Fold:" You can see Satan .
             creeping devilishly into the garden, just as a thief climbs into a house at night.
             .
             On the other hand the Bible just presents the Serpent as the definition of EVIL, just .
             waiting around in the Tree of Knowledge, like if Satan has always been there. Waiting for the .
             chance to unfold his plot against man. Milton creates a complex story out of 4 short chapters of .
             the well known Bible story. He shines light on the garden of Eden, that gives new life to the old .
             Bible story. The poem also explains that the serpent was sleeping when Satan takes over its body. .
             The Bible make it look like Satan is in fact the serpent. "returns as a mist by night into Paradise; .
             enters into the Serpent sleeping.".
             .
             Another difference between the poems and the Bible, is the fact that never once does the .
             book of Genesis say anything about Gabriel, the guardian of Eden. Milton writes about the .
             protector of Eden and his story that tells us how he watched over the humans. The poem says, .
             "Betwixt these rocky pillars Gabriel Sat, Chief of the angelic guards, awaiting night;" Gabriel's .
             story is the subplot of the poem that gives Satan's break in, more emotion.
            


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