Image Milton example essay topic
The vision we are given of Satan aloft and with expanded wings is striking, but Milton soon balances it with a sense of awkwardness, as though some of Satans awesome strength has been diminished by the battle: Incumbent on the dusky air, That felt unusual weight. In this way, Milton swiftly highlights the vast differences between Heaven and Hell and reminds us of what the angels have lost. There then follows a long and very vivid description of Hell as a landscape of erupting volcanoes, flowing lava, and earthquakes. As well as conforming to classical images of Hell as a fiery, unstable place, Milton allows us to relate to it by providing a human element to the scene. For example, thundering Aetna, a volcano in Sicily, is used in the description, which ensures that it is not too distant from human experience and knowledge.
As Satan lands, Milton gives us the powerful image of this semi-molten world that lasts through out the passage fo nothing in Hell is stable and even dry land is as tempestuous and fiery as liquid fire. As well as describing the landscape, Milton also breathes a tumultuous force and energy into it, through means of his powerful words. The subterranean wind is strong enough to rip a hill from its setting, and the whole scene is shrouded by stench and smoke. The most powerful image however, is that of a burning fire, and it is one Milton returns to again and again, linking it to how people at the time thought volcanoes were formed: Whose combustible And fuelled entrails thence conceiving fire, Sublimed with mineral fans, aid the winds. As we visualize the continuous eruptions and burning fury of Hell, leaving behind the singed bottom of a crater, Miltons vivid powers of description result in an image which is not easily forgotten. The powerful rhythm of this passage, most of which is made up of one long sentence, also adds to this impressions of force constantly building up and exploding fuelled by hate and rebellion for eternity.
The image Milton leaves us with, is one of a highly unstable place, where the forces of nature erupt day and night, and where even Satans power is somewhat weakened. It is a destructive, threatening and forceful image, and Miltons triumph is that he makes it accessible to us by linking it to what we already know and dread.