y.
This portion starts off with the descriptions of how Adam and Eve’s actions will forever change earth and how death and sin are now on earth. Death starts to kill things off, plants, animals, while evil will target mankind. It talks about the opportunity for forgiveness and redemption for mankind, to make it back into God’s glory and light. Again, Milton showcases Satan as a sympathetic character when he states that he was remorseful after Adam and Eve ate from the tree. God sacrifices his only Son to redeem mankind. It was quite bothersome for me to read Milton’s irony in his reference to the Pope and how he was the bridge to hell and the quickest way there, pretty much, was through the Roman Catholic Church. I feel like Adam and Eve are seen better in the eye’s of God after their fall. After the fall they are more willing to choose good, when they can also choose evil. They have a love for God that may not have been the same kind of love had they not fallen. Was the fall predestined? God told his Son that man would fall before it happened. It was a sad image for me when at the end it describes Adam and Eve walking away from the garden hand in hand. Paradise Lost was the hardest assignment this semester but definitely worth the read.