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022_000064/0000

Protestantism, Knowledge and the World of Science / Protestantismus, Wissen und die Welt der Wissenschaften

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Cím (EN)
Protestantism, Knowledge and the World of Science
Tudományterület
Történettudomány / History (12970)
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Collection Károli. Collection of Papers
Tudományos besorolás
tanulmánykötet
022_000064/0085
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022_000064/0085

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MIKLÓS PÉTI similar strategy of self-fashioning at the very beginning of the poet’s career. In his first published piece, the poem entitled “On Shakespeare” Milton similarly reinterprets the idea of the monument by pointing out that it takes readers to commemorate the Bard: “each heart / Hath from the leaves of thy [Shakespeare’s] unvalued book / Those Delphick lines with deep impression took” (“On Shakespeare” lines 10-12).”! Here the poem’s vocabulary (book, impression, leaves) and its actual physical setting (it was printed in the Second Folio) make it clear that Milton commemorates Shakespeare in the context of print culture.” Yet these early lines also play on the literal sense: the catachrestic image of hearts taking Shakespeare’s lines “with deep impression”—that is, as pages to be printed on—might simply refer to being (literally) strongly influenced and even moved by Shakespeare’s “Delphick lines.” But while decades later, in his reference to the Muse’s dictation, Milton seems to promote an essentially spiritual view of inspiration encumbered by material constraints (“evil days,” old age and blindness), in this early poem he cherishes the material traces and effects of inspiration, the actual printed book and the astonished readers. Be that as it may, there is something deeply traditional in Milton’s poetic self-presentation in the invocation to Book 9. By managing to disengage the process of poetic creation from writing, the narrator becomes akin to ancient inspired bards. In early Greek epic (in Hesiod and Homer), the vocabulary of poetic inspiration includes expressions of “teaching” as well as “moving” or “prompting” to song, and these might actually signify different perspectives on the same poetic process.™* The Odyssey, reputedly Milton’s favourite epic, is full of such references: the narrator claims that the Muse prompted the bard (Odyssey 8.73), whereas Odysseus praises Demodocus for being well taught by the Muse (Odyssey 8.481). One of the bards, Phemius, even makes a dual claim: he confesses to be an autodidact, at the same time he claims the Muse has planted song in his soul (Odyssey 22.347). In receiving the celestial Muse’s dictation while slumbering, Milton’s epic narrator presents himself like Homer’s bards: both as someone possessed, i.e. prompted, moved, or instructed by the Muse, and as someone already in possession of the gift of song. 2 REVARD, Stella (ed.), John Milton: Complete Shorter Poems, Oxford, Wiley-Blackwell, 2009, 44. On this point, see MENGES, Hilary, Books and Readers in Milton’s Early Poetry and Prose, English Literary Renaissance 42 (2012), 119-145. 23° Cf. OED s.v. “impression” 6b For a comprehensive survey, see TIGERSTEDT, E. N., Furor Poeticus: Poetic Inspiration in Greek Literature before Democritus and Plato, Journal of the History of Ideas 31 (1970), 168. s 84 e

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