3.8 Article

Milton, Shakespeare, and the English Grammar of Possibility

Journal

MILTON STUDIES
Volume 65, Issue 1, Pages 122-152

Publisher

PENN STATE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.5325/miltonstudies.65.1.0122

Keywords

Shakespeare; modal auxiliary verbs; Early Modern English; grammar and poetry; possibility; deliberation; liberty; ability

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This article explores Milton's art in relation to the changing grammar of possibility in Early Modern English. It examines the complex modal auxiliary verbs may and can as keywords in poetic scenes of mental deliberation. Comparing Shakespearean drama, the polysemy of may contributes to psychology in Brutus's deliberation and to political conceptions. In Milton's Sonnet 8, the rise of ability-can affirms the poet's power and the potential of English. Translated epigraphs in Areopagitica define genuine liberty through the interplay of English liberty-may and meritocratic ability-can-and-will. In Paradise Regained, can and will interrogate divine agency, while might's role is questioned in Samson Agonistes.
This article considers Milton's art in relation to modality and the evolving grammar of possibility in Early Modern English. Specifically, it reads the surprisingly complex modal auxiliary verbs, may and its rival can, as keywords in poetic scenes of mental deliberation. A comparative analysis of Shakespearean drama sets the scene, demonstrating how the polysemy of may contributes not only to a psychology of potential action in Brutus's deliberation over Caesar's assassination but also to his political conceptions. In Milton's Sonnet 8, by comparison, the ascendance of ability-can over may affirms the poet's power and the potential reach of the English language. In the translated epigraph to Areopagitica, genuine liberty finds definition in the interplay of a distinctive English liberty-may with a meritocratic ability can-and-will. Can and will are again lead performers in the deliberative interrogation of divine agency in Paradise Regained, whereas the role of might is questioned in Milton's tragic depiction of fallen agency in Samson Agonistes.

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