I've been relatively silent in this blog the past few weeks, because I've taken an unplanned, but highly fruitful (ha ha), extended
side trip deeper into the inner workings of Milton's Paradise Lost than I had
ever previously attempted. In addition to gaining a much deeper understanding
of what Milton was about in writing his great epic, I also now see more and
more clearly just how significant a source he was for Jane Austen.
I'm not
writing today about specific allusions by Austen to Milton (beyond noting that
they are far more pervasive than has been previously been noticed) but instead
to write about what I see as Milton's macro-influence on Austen.
To wit:
I now see a clear chain of allusion that stretches from Shakespeare to Milton
to Richardson to Austen -- each of these great writers being, at the foundation
of their writing, concerned with epistemology -- how we as human beings know
what we know, living in a social and psychological world which is riddled with
basic and inescapable ambiguities at every turn. Shakespeare in drama, MIlton
in epic poetry, Richardson in epistolary novels, and finally Austen in
narrative fiction, each was a master of this crucial aspect of writing.
I see
those four great writers being particularly intent on producing literature that
would serve as grist for the mill of ambitious readers wishing to be
challenged, and become more skilled and self-aware in dealing with the
ambiguities of daily life-- and they each did this by producing double stories,
which could plausibly be read in two different ways. If you could learn to see
both stories in their writing, then you would be better equipped to see them in
real life, where no one has an omniscient narrator perched on his or her
shoulder, to explain what is "really" going on.
So, in
Milton's case, Blake was only quarter correct in his famous assertion that
Milton was of the devil's party but did not know it. I'd amend that to say that
Milton wrote Paradise Lost so that readers could plausibly be of the devil's
party or not be of the devil's party --- and that Milton did this
deliberately.
And so
now, I see this great chain of literary inheritance, in which Milton emulated
Shakespeare, Richardson emulated both Shakespeare and Milton, and then Austen
emulated her three great predecessors, in this one crucial respect, despite
writing in different forms. So I now see a thread that runs from Iago to Satan
to Lovelace to the seductive male villains of Austen’s novels –not just
Willoughby, Wickham, Henry Crawford, and Cousin Elliot, but also, in the shadow
stories, Brandon, Darcy, and Knightley.
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
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