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Introduction
Reflecting on the fundamental ideological orientations that impelled the French Revolution as opposed to the English Civil War, Matthew Arnold once observed succinctly, â1789 asked of a thing, Is it rational? 1642 asked of a thing, Is it legal?â Arnoldâs insight about seventeenth-century Englandâs profoundly legal turn of mind has been reinforced by subsequent studies of the period. For example, Deborah Shuger writes that law occupies âthe troubled center of the Renaissance episteme,â and she calls it âthe characteristic discipline of the late Renaissance, in much the same way that logic is the characteristic discipline of the Middle Ages.â1 We see this intense preoccupation with law in many of the periodâs major literary works. Authors like Sir Thomas More, Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, and John Donne all show both an interest in broad legal ideas and a familiarity with the technical nuts and bolts of legal justice.2 In a nutshell, this book argues that we should add John Milton to the list of early modern writers who had a detailed understanding of and interest in the law and who used his works to raise searching questions about the lawâs proper function. Although Miltonâs view of the law is my subject broadly speaking, I do not attempt here to provide a comprehensive study of Miltonâs comments about law and the just relations that law was supposed to ensure. Such a study lies beyond my present scope, given the various forms of legal justice in the period (constitutional, international, mercantile, criminal, civil, equitable, etc.), the many different legal systems with which Milton was familiar (common law, Roman law, canon law, brehon law, Anglo-Dutch law, etc.), and the sheer volume of his writings. Instead, as my title indicates, The Legal Epic concentrates on Paradise Lost. I argue that Paradise Lost sits at the apex of the early modern periodâs long fascination with law and judicial processes and that if we do not understand the links that the early modern period drew between law and religion, we cannot see the way law works in Miltonâs poem to help âjustify the ways of God to menâ (1.26).
Paradise Lost is saturated with legal terms. Examples include âpatrimony,â ârealty,â âinjunction,â âprohibition,â âarch-felon,â âgrand thief,â âallegations,â âfact,â âsentence,â âdevolved,â âequal,â âverdict,â âevidence,â âpartner,â âproof,ââpropriety,â âcrime,â âcontempt,â âtrespass,â âcollateral,â âact of grace,â âpossession,â âdevise,â and many more. When Milton uses these and other legal terms, he points both to general ideas of legality and to ways in which real early modern laws worked.3 An excerpt from book 10 shows this legal precision at work. When the fallen angels drop to their bellies and turn into snakes, Milton calls them âaccessoriesâ to Satanâs âriotâ (10.520, 521). In doing so, he makes a set of exact legal discriminations. Since the fallen angels were confined to Hell while Satan roamed free, Milton means the word âaccessoriesâ in a specifically common law sense. Whereas a code like Roman law generally defined accessories as those who actually assisted in the commission of a crime, common law had a broader definition.4 As the early modern common lawyer John Brydall explains, an accessory after the fact was âhe, that receiveth, favoureth, aideth, or comforteteth [sic] any Man, that had done any murder or other felony, whereof he hath knowledge,â even if he himself was not present at the crimeâs commission.5 In book 10 Milton shows the fallen angels providing this kind of felonious favor, aid, and comfort to Satan, for, having heard the story of his success in Eden, they attempt to give him their âuniversal shout and high applause,â an acclaim that turns to hissing (10.505). In the next sentence, Milton calls them âaccessories,â so he is applying this label with a lawyerly precision, as soon as possible after they clear the statutory bar.6 When he convicts the fallen angels of abetting the specific crime of âriot,â Milton also alludes to contemporary legal norms. Unlike our modern association of riot with large, violent crowds, an early modern riot occurred when âthree or more do an unlawful Act.â7 The detail of three persons was foundational to riotâs legal definition, appearing consistently in early modern legal works.8 By the time he enters Hell in book 10, Satan has recently collaborated with Sin and Death. As a result, when he addresses his followers, he is newly guilty of the three-personed crime of riot, and the fallen angels can be accurately called accessories to riot. (Early modern riots typically targeted either enclosures or food stores, and so Milton provides a dark parody: Sin and Death will breach Edenâs âenclosure greenâ and Death will âstuff [his] mawâ with Edenâs riches [4.133; 10.601].)9 These legal terms allow Milton to make two theological points. First, the fallen angels have earlier fantasized about being âexemptâ from âHeavânâs high jurisdiction,â but since riot and being an accessory to felony were both domestic crimes, Milton uses the law to remind readers that even in the heart of Hell, the fallen angels live under Godâs domestic jurisdiction (2.318, 319).10 Second, the logic of the common law helps justify the punishments meted out to the fallen angels. In Brydallâs words, any criminal accessory âshall be punished and shall have Judgement of life and member, as well as the principal,â and so Milton applies a basic principle of English common law when he shows Satanâs punishment being transmitted to his followers.11
A similarly informed use of early modern legal practices and ideas is evident at many of the poemâs key junctures. For instance, when God and the Son make provision in book 3 for Adam and Eveâs salvation, Milton shows both the theological virtue of mercy and an accurate version of early modern pardoning protocols. When God elevates the Son in book 5, we see Miltonâs anti-trinitarian beliefs, and we also see a reflection of the two-stage process that constituted early modern legislating. When he calls Satan a âgrand thief,â Milton assumes that readers will know the difference between petty and grand larceny (4.192), and when Abdiel refers to Satan as one who has lost not only âfaithâ but also ârealty,â Milton alludes to the fact that under common law, breaking faith with oneâs lord had historically resulted in the forfeiture of oneâs real estate (6.115). Likewise, when Adam refuses to relinquish his âbondâ in Eve, readers are tacitly asked to remember the crucial role that sealed bonds played in early modern finance (9.956). In these and many other passages in Paradise Lost, Milton uses early modern legal principles, cases, and statutes to help readers make sense of God and Godâs plans for a wayward humanity.
The Paradise Within and Without
Seeing the role that law plays in Paradise Lost has the potential to change our thinking about the poem in two main ways. First, legal ideas support Miltonâs stated goal: to âassert eternal providenceâ and to âjustify the ways of God to menâ (1.25, 26).12 The verb âto assertâ evolved from a Roman legal practice (ad + serÄre) whereby a man either claimed or set free a slave by formally placing his hand on the slaveâs head.13 Miltonâs goal to âjustifyâ has a similar set of jurisprudential resonances. While Milton scholars have typically read the verb âto justifyâ in its moral/theological sense of âto confer or assure righteousness,â it also had a range of specifically juridical meanings in Miltonâs day that sprang from its etymological root in jure. For example, âto justifyâ could mean âto corroborate, prove, verify,â âto try as a judge,â âto make lawful,â and âto offer a defense that the act [in question] was lawful.â14 When he says his goal is to âjustifyâ God, Milton signals that at one level, he will be providing a legal defense. He thereby invites his readers to judge the ways of God not only according to reason and conscience but also according to widespread ideas about legal justice. In Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce, Milton writes that God âbinds himself like a just lawgiver to his own prescriptions, gives himself to be understood by men, judges and is judgâd, measures and is commensurate to right reasonâ (CPW 2:292). As I explain in chapter 2, for Milton and his contemporaries, the category of Godâs âprescriptionsâ was an elastic one that also included human law, and so God âbinds himselfâ to the principles of both the Law and the law, divine law as well as temporal law. This act of self-binding means that God also wants to be âmeasure[d]â against these complementary sets of principles. God invites human beings to judge him, applying not only the yardstick of reason and conscience but also the yardstick of the law, which wasâat least in theoryâitself another expression of Godâs nature and his will for humanity. For example, when Death calls Satan a âtraitor angelâ who has âconjuredâ against God, and when the epic voice describes wedded love as a form of âsole proprietyâ (2.689, 693; 4.751), Milton draws on contemporary ideas about how the law works, and in each case, legal principles cooperate with theological ones to show that Godâs justice runs a comprehensible course.15
As a result, while fallen Adam complains, âInexplicable/[Godâs] justice seemsâ (10.754â55), Godâs justice is not as wholly inexplicable as Adam claims, for Milton has taken pains to describe many aspects of it in terms of widely known legal principles and procedures. Adam himself offers a good example. Not long after he laments the unfathomable nature of Godâs justice, he and Eve conform to one of the most basic early modern assumptions about judicial pardons: they are careful to beg pardon in the same place where they were sentenced. At this point in Paradise Lost, as in so many others, Milton aligns the operations of human temporal justice and those of divine justice. Ironically, given his professed hostility to Miltonâs God, critic William Empson calls inadvertent attention to one of these law-Law alignments. Criticizing God for his professed inability in book 3 to remit Adam and Eveâs penalty, Empson claims that Godâs rationale is âno part of English justice, because the prerogative of mercy has long been a fundamental power of the Crown.â16 But in reasoning by judicial analogy, Empson oversimplifies the early modern periodâs judicial terrain. While he is correct that the Crown had the authority to issue pardons, English juridical tradition also put careful restrictions on the nature and extent of pardons. Admittedly, English monarchs often ignored these restrictions, but the later Stuartsâ insistence on their rights to issue dispensations at will was a major cause of their overthrow in 1688. As a result, when God scrupulously limits his pardoning power, he acts like a law-abiding monarch should and not like Empsonâs divine hypocrite.
By suggesting that Milton uses law in Paradise Lost to help explain Godâs ways, I part company from those critics who stress the inscrutability of Miltonâs God. For instance, Victoria Silver argues that God in Paradise Lost is perplexing and contradictory, and Stanley Fish claims that since human beings must simply obey, Godâs comprehensibility is beside the point.17 In contrast, I emphasize the way law helps readers of Paradise Lost build a conceptual bridge between Heaven and Earth, using what they know of temporal law to understand, even if only partially, the operations of God and the practices of a distant Edenic world. My argument also pushes back against those critics who see Milton as embracing a position of conflicted ambivalence.18 However, I am not suggesting that Milton had no doubts about Godâs justice. While Paradise Lostâs legal allusions help untieâor at least loosenâmany of the knots in this poem, other knots remain fastened tight (How could Satan be âself-temptedâ [3.130]? Why is the Sonâs sacrifice necessary for humanityâs salvation? Why is Adamâs guilt visited upon his offspring? Etc...