Analysis Of Adam And Eve In Milton's Paradise Lost

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Adam and Eve were literary paragons of human nature. The ending of Paradise Lost details the departure of Adam and Eve from Eden. This could be perceived as a commentary regarding the likely-hood that Adam and Eve were the heralds of sin, but we ought to recognize it is not some divine or infernal force that becomes the hero. The mortal creations are the ones who reconcile the chaos that the heavenly forces introduce. Only looking at how Eve is fooled, completely demerits the human ability to adapt and to form complex solutions. As story characters, the writer must design their three dimensions and it is clear from Milton’s authorial intent that they were complex beings that had the bravery to face impossible odds, they chose to put fate in their own hands. In this way they put faith in themselves. Adam and Eve are exempla for humanity’s struggles regarding the burden of god, the complexity of companionship, their …show more content…

Adam and Eve’s interactions reflect this burden of human society by the way Adam responds to Eve as he is giving her the wreath that he created for her. Adam prepares a wreath for his beloved Eve and as he is about to give it to her, it becomes known that she ate from the Tree of Knowledge and because of this he is shocked and drops the wreath symbolizing his loss of love for her. His view of her as his companion lessens because he views her as one in a “fallen” state, i.e. the fallen wreath. He accepts her sinful acts by the end though and through his nature he breaks the bounds of logic and represents the complexity that is companionship. Companionship forces people to make people go through with actions that are often completely illogical. The construct causes Adam to go with Eve out of Eden and face the terror of the future together, a selfless act, but also one of dedication and dictated by their

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