Sunday, June 2, 2019

Author Intention through Character Reaction in Paradise Lost and the Bl

How would you react if you realized you had altered the time to come of an entire people? Would you be sympathetic or justificative? Would you be regretful or sincere? I believe that the reaction of a person in such a situation gives insight into their in line of character and shows us the real extent of their influence over their surroundings and beyond. John Miltons exaltation in Paradise Lost altered the future for mankind just as Margaret Cavendishs Empress of the Blazing World altered the future for the inhabitants of the Blazing World. Both characters realized the consequences of their actions and desired to change it back to the reliable state. Both were regretful for their deeds. However, the manner in which each of the characters showed regret gives us insight into the respective authors intention for the work. By analyzing the difference amid the lamentations of go and the Empress, we can see strikingly opposing approaches to the same desire to correct the wrong. Ad am falls into a sincere state of despair term the Empress is much more apathetic about the situation. From this observation, we can make claims about Milton and Cavendish and his or her reasoning for fashioning the characters in the way they are portrayed. From the outset of the plot, the storylines of both texts seem to parallel along a very similar outline. The opening of each story is a description of a paradise, free from the corruption of conflict, deception, or sin and more importantly, free from the issue of a foreign influence. Perhaps the most influential factor that allows these paradises to continue in their original state is the naturalness they possess from just not knowing any other way, the lack of alien influence. This lack of knowledge was G... ...g entirely fictitious, fabricated, and immaterial. This alteration impacted the reactions of Adam and the Empress. Adams real existence required a natural, real reaction just as the Empress artificial existence conjured a false, inhuman reaction. The apathetic tone of the Empress mirrored the apathetic tone of Cavendish in stating her intended purpose for the work. The serious tone of Adam mirrored the seriousness of Miltons intended purpose. Both Adam and the Empress had decidedly altered the future conditions of an entire people to the point that they desired restoration of the original status. However, the Empress apathetic tone and Adams serious tone shows, respectively, both the extent of influence of the affected people, the reality factor of that people, and most significant, the importance of those people upon the current state of the contemporary world.

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