Milton’s Book of Numbers: Book 1 and Its Catalog

Abstract:
          This chapter shows how book 1 of
          Paradise Lost
          metaphorically depicts the role of the devil in raising the rebel angels out of their “bottomless perdition,” an act of poetic creation analogous to the divine creation of the universe described in the invocation—“how the heavens and earth/Rose out of chaos.” The chief devils described in the catalog that occupies the center of book 1 and organizes its poetic figures and symbolic geography—Carthage, Sodom, Egypt, Babel-Babylon, Rome—are precisely those who will come to inhabit the pagan shrines that human idolatry will build next to or even inside the Jerusalem temple, profaning God's house. This catalog—whose traditional epic function is to size up military force—instead suggests the force of spiritual falsehood, and it corresponds to the defeated devils' own reluctance to pursue another direct war against God; they would rather resort to satanic fraud.

SEEK ID: https://testing.sysmo-db.org/publications/98

DOI: 10.23943/princeton/9780691161914.003.0002

Projects: Xiaoming Test

Publication type: Journal

Book Title: Milton’s Book of Numbers: Book 1 and Its Catalog

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Citation: Princeton University Press

Date Published: 19th Oct 2017

Registered Mode: by DOI

Author: David Quint

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Citation
Quint, D. (2017). Milton’s Book of Numbers: Book 1 and Its Catalog. In Princeton University Press. Princeton University Press. https://doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691161914.003.0002
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Created: 22nd Oct 2025 at 18:25

Last updated: 22nd Oct 2025 at 18:25

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