Milton's Eve and Wisdom Dinner Party Scene
Milton's Eve and Wisdom Dinner Party Scene
Milton's Eve and Wisdom Dinner Party Scene
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two features of human life . . .inextricably linked
(90). They are certainly linked activities during the
scene in question here, where the most
comprehensive sequence of instruction in the epic is
juxtaposed with a primordial idyll. Barbara Lewalski
writes of georgic rather than pastoral activity here:
Miltons Edenic pastoral undergoes continuing
redefinition . . . . Husbandry, though unlaborious, is
necessary to the maintenance of the Garden (174).
For Raphaels visit Eve redefines the pastoral meal
described in Book 4, when she and Adam simply
enjoyed what was to hand, unprocessed: The
savoury pulp they chew, and in the rind / Still as
they thirsted scoop the brimming stream (4.335).
Here, in the more festive scene, Eve sorts, orders,
and arranges the food, and makes delicious grape
juice and tempered dulcet creams (5.347). Her
ihusbandry, the careful processing of the food and
drink, is a new development.
The idea of transubstantiation, explained at length
by Raphael, illustrates the inextricability of the link
between the material and the immaterial. Angels eat
and digest food in a similar way to Adam and Eve,
they Tasting concoct, digest, assimilate, / And corporeal to incorporeal turn (5.412). As far as knowledge is concerned Mans nourishment, by gradual
scale sublimed / To vital spirits aspire, to animal, /
To intellectual, give both life and sense (5. 483). The
continuum between the material and the immaterial,
food and knowledge, is explained carefully by
Raphael. For us, Milton provides food for thought,
and this is made possible by Eve as she conveys
Raphaels message into the practical sphere. She
makes sense of it, and the text privileges her contribution as it does that of Raphael.
Evidence in support of the idea of a link between
Raphael and Eve is found in other ways too. From
the moment of Raphaels arrival in Eden the text
emphasizes a reciprocity of perfumed essences that
proclaims their parallel functions. Eve is consistently
associated with flowers, and she strews the ground
around the table With rose and odours from the
shrub unfumed. (5.348). The immaterial exchange of
perfumes prefigures the material exchange of food for
knowledge which is to follow. Raphael is draped elegantly in his three pairs of wings as he lands, and
walks towards the bower, wafting perfume and regal
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composu
fragrance filled / The circuit wide (5.285). The clouds
of fragrance which accompany him are met by the
aroma
myrrh, / And flowering odours, cassia, nard, and
balm (5.292). Thus heavenly essences combine with
earthly essences, just as knowledge of God gives rise
to earthly response and obedience, for example in the
form of the songs of praise sung in unison by Adam
and Eve. Diane McColley sees this reciprocity in the
passage describing Adams account of his wedding
night, when he says that Heaven and earth. . . join
to approve (8.513) Gods approval is shown then by
the mixing of perfumes. I would suggest that the same
approval joins heaven to earth at the scene of Raphaels arrival. God has, after all, sanctioned the visit of
his sociable spirit. The perfumed air wafts divine
approval,
grance which permeates heaven accompanies Gods
speech and enables a Sense of new joy ineffable in
3.135-37.
The philosopher Pierre Charron, a representative
voice of Renaissance humanist wisdom, describes the
sense of smell as one fitted to those Spirits and
Avenues that belong to the Soul and Body both.
Raphael is about to embark on a discourse on both
soul and body, and it is therefore appropriate that his
visit is introduced by the exchange of perfumes,
signifying the interdependency, and indeed the
relatedness of the material with the immaterial? The
scented air, thus sanctioned, provides the perfect
ambience for Adam and Eves reception of new ideas.
Additionally, Raphael receives the scents of Eden,
which provide a means for him to learn. Both the soul
and body are engaged in reciprocal harmonious
learning.
Adam spots the approaching archangel as he sits in
his doorway waiting for Eve to prepare the noontime
meal. This division of labor, a possible intrusion of
stereotyped notions of gendered behavior, or
seventeenth-century etiquette, is shown in another
light when read against Proverbs, where the woman,
procuring and preparing food for her family, fulfills
a function essential to life in protecting, preserving,
and securing the economic base. Carol Myers writes
about the industrious woman in Proverbs 31,
whose strength is portrayed mainly in terms of her
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her correction of Adams excessive ideas of hospitality, but also in her unwillingness to serve fruit which
is excessively watery. Her understanding of temperance anticipates Raphaels in her tempering of the
dessert as in From many a berry, and from sweet
kernels pressed / She tempers dulcet creams (5.346).
Eve is careful, frugal, and temperate-she introduces
the notion of frugality to the epic. As John Guillory
has argued, the rhetoric of frugality is central to the
text: all the characters and thematic events touch
upon it (80). But it is Eve, not Adam, who introduces
the concept. Eves primary role in the exercise of
frugality is of central importance; she even engages in
an exchange with an angel in performance of this
exercise.
Thus Eve supplies a degree of wisdom about
created things to this prelapsarian classroom. She
chooses What order so contrived as not to mix /
Tastes, not well joined, inelegant, but bring / Taste
after taste upheld with kindliest change (8.334; my
emphasis). Eve brings Raphaels cosmological teachings down to earth most aptly, and through her
consonance with nature and sense of order, she has
access to a major source of wisdom. Charron writes
that there are three sorts of Wisdom, Divine, Humane, and Worldly; these relate and bear proportion
to God; to Nature in its primitive Purity and Perfection; and to Nature lapsed and depraved
(Charron, Authors Preface). Knowledge of the latter
is not yet applicable, but Eves confidence in this
scene shows her knowledge of Nature in its primitive Purity and Perfection, which indicates her state
of wisdom.
The pattern of Eves reaction to Adam follows
Raphaels closely. Irene Samuel notes how Raphael
tends to reprove Adam before accommodating his
wishes. Eve acts as Raphael does in this respect. First,
she corrects Adams ideas on food preparation, and
then she accommodates his main wish, which is that
they should be hospitable (Samuel 708, 710). This
similarity of approach sustains the link between Eve
and Raphael. Yet all three learn during this episode.
Eve functions through her direct interaction with all
her surroundings; she does not confine her attention
to matters relating to Adam only as one is led to
expect by the line He for God only, she for God in
him (4.299). Christine Froula notices Eves desire
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for experienced rather than mediated knowledge,
and the problems this poses to the epic authorities
(329). Eve, in contrast to Raphael, fulfills her task
intuitively, working under no other guidance but her
own. So the reciprocity of learning activities at the
dinner-party scene is not consistent with a straight
line of wisdom and authority passed down from God
to Adam and so to Eve. Eve is not merely a passive
recipient of the crumbs from Adams table; she has
made the cake, and Adam i s not too sure of her
ingredients.
Eve modifies and moderates Adams ideas. She sees
to it that Raphael will perceive that here on earth /
God hath dispensed his bounties as in heaven (5.329).
In creating the meal, Eve acts directly upon the raw
materials. She first exercises choice and order
(5.333,334), the most privileged terms, and then
gathers, heaps, crushes, presses, and tempers-all active verbs signifying active skills which
bring about change. Eve interprets the bounties of
nature, arranges the created things, creating out of
the Creation. Raphael carries the notion of change,
demonstrated by Eve, into his explanation of
transsubstantiation. Even angels eat, and corporealto
incorporeal turn (5.413). Eves meal complements,
illustrates, and inspires the discourse sanctioned by
the Creator via his archangel. It inspires Raphaels
explanation and performs a conciliatory and mediating function between heaven and earth.
If the approach of Raphael heralds the opening of
the scene, the departure of Eve signifies its disruption.
There is a dynamic counterpoise here, the movement
towards the table balanced by the movement away
from it. Eve, with her affiliation to nature, is
especially receptive to Raphaels plant metaphor.
From the idea of the root to the flowers and their
fruit / Mans nourishment (5.482), an issue close to
her heart, Eve learns the significance of the process
from the material to the immaterial. Plants, food, and
wisdom become officially interrelated by Raphaels
authorization, and gardening takes on a new dimension. From one level of competence, the domestic,
Eves pursuit of wisdom continues in another form as
she departs to resume her gardening with new intensity. Eve becomes a terraculturalist.
University of Oslo
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NOTES
Hannah Mores Coelebs on Miltons Eve (quoted
in Wittreich 163).More discusses Miltons Eve in the
introductory pages of her book Coelebs in Search of a
W q e (1808).
Mores book only mentions Eve in the introductory passages.
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WORKS CITED
Raphael disparages Adams enquiries about astronomy, but answers them, and then comments,
Solicit not thy thoughts with matters h i d (8.167).
Raphael, though with misgiving, spends some time
answering the question before he speaks his mild
rebuke and counsel (Samuel 708,710).
Soliciting Interpretation: Literary Theory and Seventeenth-Century English Poetry. Ed. Elizabeth D.
Harvey and Katharine Eisaman Maus. Chicago: U
Chicago P, 1990.68-88.
Hobby, Elaine. A Womans best setting out is
silence:The Writings of Hannah Wolley. Culture
and Society in the Stuart Restoration. Cambridge:
Cambridge UP, 1990. 179-200.
Hutson, Lorna. The UsurersDaughter:Male F d h i p
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Lewalski, Barbara Kiefer. Paradise Lost and the
Rhetoric ofLiterary F o m . Princeton, NJ: Princeton
UP, 1985.
Lewis, C.S. A Preface to Paradise Lost. London:
Oxford UP, 1942.
Low, Anthony. Plato, and His Equall Xenophon:
A Note on Miltons Apology For Smectymnuus.
Milton Quarterly 4 (1970): 20-22.
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