3.8 Article

Paradiastole, Lost and Regained

Journal

MILTON STUDIES
Volume 64, Issue 1, Pages 123-150

Publisher

PENN STATE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.5325/MILTONSTUDIES.64.1.0123

Keywords

Paradise Lost; paradiastole; temptation; rhetoric; Satan

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This article examines the rhetorical figure of paradiastole and its role in Satan's temptation discourse in Paradise Lost. It argues that Milton intentionally utilizes paradiastole to reflect the interpretive challenge of temptation. By analyzing the temptation discourses in books 5 and 9, the article demonstrates how Milton provides readers with clues to discern the sincerity of claims to virtuous intent made by Satan.
The rhetorical figure of paradiastole (the redescription of vices as virtues) offers important insight into Satan's temptation discourse in Paradise Lost. This article argues that Milton deliberately employs the rhetorical ambiguity of paradiastole to mimic the interpretive challenge that instances of temptation present to the practice of ethical discernment. Milton's case for trial by what is contrary offers an interpretive context to meet this challenge. After addressing the difficulties inherent in understanding paradiastole and the principles from Milton's prose that help one to do so, the article analyzes the figure's operation in the temptation discourses of books 5 and 9. In Satan's paradiastolic speeches, Milton presents readers with sufficient clues to discern, even if Eve does not, whether the claims to virtuous intent can be sustained.

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