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Copyright Matthew Steggle, Editor, EMLS 2014

Abstract

[...]this study will trace the development of the present moment of consciousness into a full spectrum of time awareness, which allows for an understanding of grace not only as a mere intertwining of human and divine durations but also as a moral imperative. [...]preceding the angel's story of the creation the epic specifies that the time is still this now of contemplative consciousness which has been opened in Book 5.300: and now Led on, yet sinless, with desire to know [...] Only from a distance, both spatial and temporal, can the divine component in human time be invested with meaning. [...]when Milton alludes in his description of the chariot to the moment of revelation in Exodus 19 he invests it with this Hebraic meaning of the newly formed relationship between the divine and the human, which can only be fully understood from a distance. Adam's echoing of Michael's formulation of the paradox of the Miltonic aevum in his association of God's presence in the world with 'good / Still overcoming evil' (12.565-66) shows that he has fully internalized the understanding of grace in and through the paradox of the Miltonic aevum and, like Michael, expresses this understanding in moral terms. [...]in its fully transformed form, complete with its moral implications, the representation of the full scope of the present time of consciousness in the minds of Adam and Eve shifts the emphasis from an understanding of grace as a static concept to an understanding of grace as a dynamic, creative force, which is no less human than it is divine.

Details

Title
Milton's aevum: The Time Structure of Grace in Paradise Lost
Author
Langer, Ayelet
Pages
1-21
Publication year
2014
Publication date
2014
Publisher
Matthew Steggle, Editor, EMLS
ISSN
12012459
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1544204190
Copyright
Copyright Matthew Steggle, Editor, EMLS 2014