How to read this guide:
Read the black text to enjoy full story of Paradise
Lost with flow.
Read the quotations in blue text to enjoy Milton’s own words —
each one adds special charm and fascination to the story.
Book - 1
The Lake of Fire and the Birth of Pandemonium
1.2- Milton’s Invocation to goddess
The poem
begins with a blind poet invoking the Heavenly Muse (the
goddess of poetry) who once inspired Moses on Sinai (a mountain). Milton asks
this Holy Spirit to “justify the ways of God to men.”
“Sing, Heavenly Muse, that on the secret top
Of Oreb, or of Sinai, didst inspire
That shepherd, who first taught the chosen seed,
In the beginning how the heavens and earth
Rose out of Chaos.”
(Book 1, lines 6–10)
Then he
announces the theme of his poem: the disobedience of Man, the loss of Paradise,
and the entrance of Death into the world.
“Of Man’s first disobedience, and the fruit
Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal taste
Brought death into the world, and all our woe,
With loss of Eden.”
(Book 1, lines 1–4)
In fact, the poem is not about Satan, but about us —
humanity’s original sin. The “fruit” is both literal (an apple) and
metaphorical (the consequence of choice).
1.2- Satan on the Burning Lake
Story begins with Satan lying chained to a
lake of fire that gives no light but rather “darkness visible.” He has just
been hurled from Heaven with his rebel angels. Next to him lies Beelzebub, his second-in-command, whom he tries
to solace by declaring: “Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.”
“A dungeon horrible, on all sides round
As one great furnace flamed, yet from those flames
No light, but rather darkness visible
Served only to discover sights of woe.”
(Book 1, lines 61–64)
1.3- The Fallen Angels Appear
Satan asks Beelzebub to stand and they fly to
dry land (a volcanic plain strewn with minerals). Satan strikes the ground with
his spear. Immediately, a vast army of fallen angels rises from the lake, their
banners waving and their armor shining through the thick fog. Milton lists
their names (Moloch, Chemos, Baalim, Astarte, Thammuz, Dagon, Belial, Mammon) —
all pagan gods from the Bible’s condemnations.
Satan addresses the army of rebel angels: “All
is not lost; the unconquerable will, / And study of revenge, immortal hate, /
And courage never to submit or yield.” He declares that the mind can make its
own place: “Which way I fly is Hell; myself am Hell.”
“The mind is its own place, and in itself
Can make a Heav’n of Hell, a Hell of Heav’n.”
(Book 1, lines 254–255)
1.4- The Construction of Pandemonium
The demons (fallen angels) build a Pandemonium
(a grand palace/council hall). The palace was small for that large rebel army. Therefore,
the demons shrink to tiny size to fit in that council hall:
“Thus incorporeal spirits to smallest forms
Reduced their shapes immense.”
(Book 1, lines 789–790)
1.5- The Debate in Pandemonium
Three speakers propose different strategies:
- Moloch (the fierce) demands open war
again, no matter the cost.
- Belial (the smooth-tongued) suggests doing
nothing — perhaps God will tire of punishing them.
- Mammon (the materialist) says: make Hell
comfortable; find peace in “this dark desert.”
But Beelzebub offers Satan’s hidden plan: God
has just created a new race — Man — on a new world (Earth). They are weaker
than angels, yet loved by God. We can corrupt them.
Book - 2
The Gates of Hell, Sin and Death, and the Voyage Through
Chaos
2.1- The Debate Continues
Book 2 opens with Satan seated on his throne
in Pandemonium. He calls for vote. The demons vote for his proposed
plan — not because they love Satan, but because they hate God.
2.2- The Council of Three
Moloch speaks
again: “Let us assault Heaven directly, even if we die.”
Belial replies:
Better to wait.”
Mammon:
“We can build a golden kingdom here.”
But Beelzebub opines: “War is
folly. Instead, one should go to the new world and delude Man.” The demons
applaud and Satan himself decide to execute the plan.
“There is a place — if ancient prophecies be true —
Another world, the happy seat of some new race
Called Man.”
(Book 2, lines 346–348)
2.3- Satan’s Journey to the Gates
Satan flies toward the nine-fold gates of Hell
(three of brass, three of iron, three of adamantine) where he meets Sin (a
half-woman, half-serpent, with hellhounds gnawing her womb) and Death (a
shapeless shadow). Sin explains: she sprang from Satan’s head in Heaven; he (Satan)
raped her, producing Death, who (Satan) then raped her (death) to produce the
hounds. Satan bribes them (Death and Sin) and they open the gates. He comes out
of hell and flies toward the newly created universe. Satan finds God’s new universe hanging from
Heaven’s wall like a star. He lands on the outer sphere.
Book 3
God’s Foreknowledge and the Son’s Sacrifice
3.1- The Council in Heaven
God sits on His throne, surrounded by angels.
He sees Satan approaching Earth. But He (God) let him come — because He has
given free will to angels and men.
“I formed them free, and free they must remain
Till they enthrall themselves.”
(Book 3, lines 124–125)
God declares to the spirit of Jesus: “Man will
fall by free will — not because of fate or force”. Justice
demands death for sin. But Mercy can intercede — Does anyone offers to die for
Man? No angel volunteers. Then spirit of Jesus moves forward and speaks:
“Behold me. I will pay the price.” God accepts, exalts the spirit of Jesus
above all names, and orders the angels to bow. (This is the “exaltation” that
enraged Satan originally.)
3.2- Satan Tricking Uriel
Meanwhile, Satan lands on the sun. He has
disguised himself as a young, innocent cherub. He reaches Uriel,
the archangel of the sun (called “sharpest-sighted spirit in Heaven”). Satan
asks where God’s new creation lives. Uriel points to Paradise.
“Look downward on that globe whose hither side
With light from hence, though but reflected, shines.”
(Book 3, lines 722–723)
Book 4
Satan in Eden — First Sight of Adam and Eve
Satan lands on Mount Niphates,
overlooking Eden. The beauty of Eden allures him and he feels remorse over his
decision.
“Me miserable! Which way shall I fly
Infinite wrath, and infinite despair?
Which way I fly is Hell; myself am Hell.”
(Book 4, lines 73–75)
4.1- The Garden and the First Humans
Eden is walled by beautiful nature: a
thick hedge, a lush forest, a crystal river that divides into four famous
streams (Pison, Gihon, Tigris, Euphrates). Inside, Adam and Eve walk naked and
unashamed. Milton describes them: Adam is heroic, dark-haired, contemplative;
Eve is golden-haired, softer, sexual without lewdness.
“She, as a veil, down to her slender waist
Her unadorned golden tresses wore
Disheveled, but in wanton ringlets waved
As the vine curls her tendrils.”
(Book 4, lines 304–307)
4.2- Adam and Eve’s Dwelling
Both Adam and Eve live in a cool cave
covered with roses and myrtle (white marriage flowers). There is no need for
walls or locks; innocence requires no privacy because there is no shame.
“A mount, whose grove of myrtle and of rose
Was roofed above, and at the side a cave.”“Roofed with sweetest roses and myrtle twined, They slept.”
(Book 4, lines 690–693)
4.3- Satan’s Jealousy
Satan watches them embrace, hears them
pray, and starts weeping — but cannot repent now. He leaps into the Garden as a
cormorant (a bird), then a lion and finally a toad whispering into Eve’s ear
while she sleeps. In fact, Satan attacks the imagination first — Sin begins in
the mind before the act.
4.4- The Angelic Arrest
The angel Ithuriel touches
the toad with his spear — the disguised Satan springs up, gigantic and
terrible. Gabriel confronts him. Satan prepares to fight, but God
shows a sign: golden scales appear in the sky. One scale holds Satan’s fate and
Satan flees.
4.5- Evening Prayer
Adam and Eve retire to their bower (a natural tent of roses and myrtle). They pray together and sleep in innocent embrace.Book 5
Eve’s Dream and Raphael’s Warning
5.1- The Dream
In dream, Eve sees a beautiful angelic figure
eating the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge (the forbidden tree) and going up. She
wakes troubled and Adam reassures her saying ‘dreams are not sins’.
“From that day, I never saw a shape more divine —
He seemed a seraph, and he led me upward
To the Tree of Knowledge. He ate, and flew.”
(Book 5, lines 50–53, paraphrased)
5.2- Raphael’s Arrival
God sends Raphael (Archangel)
to warn Adam. Raphael descends on six wings, passes through the Gate of Heaven
(made up of pearl and gold), and lands in Eden. Adam serves a feast of fruits
and nuts. Raphael eats with them — angels digest food into pure spirit, a sign
of the body’s future transformation.
“Six wings he wore, with which he covered
His face and feet, and with his third he flew.”
(Book 5, lines 277–278)
5.2- Raphael’s Warning
Raphael tells of Satan’s envy: when God
announced the spirit of Jesus’ exaltation, Satan plotted rebellion. He argued
that angels were self-created and owed no obedience. Abdiel alone
contradicted Satan: “Shalt thou give law to God? Thou, a creature?” Abdiel
leaves the rebel camp, hurled away with scorn.
“Shalt thou give law to God? Shalt thou dispute
With Him the points of liberty, who made
Thee what thou art?”
(Book 5, lines 822–824)
Raphael further warns Adam to obey God freely,
not out of fear. Eve, respectfully, leaves the conversation (her role is to
tend dinner). Adam asks: “Why warn us? We have no desire to disobey.” In turn,
Raphael narrates the battle.
Book 6
The War in Heaven
6.1- Day One
Archangel Michael led the loyal angels. Satan
led the rebels. They fought with swords and shields, but no one died (angels
can be wounded but not killed). Angels’ wounds heal instantly.
6.2- Day Two
Satan invented artillery —
cannons that blow the loyal angels back. They responded them by uprooting
mountains and hurling them.
“They tore the hills from their foundations, and threw
Mountains on the rebel host.”
(Book 6, lines 641–642)
6.3- Day Three
The spirit of Jesus drives a chariot (wheels
of emerald, eyes all around, cherubim horses) into the rebel host. He drives
them over the wall of Heaven. They fall nine days through Chaos into Hell.
“Nine days they fell — confused Chaos roared,
And felt tenfold confusion.”
(Book 6, lines 871–872)
6.4- Abdiel’s Triumph
Abdiel, the faithful angel who left Satan,
fights heroically. Raphael concludes: “Obedience is the key to happiness.”
“Obedience is the key to happiness —
Without it, Heaven itself becomes Hell.”
(Book 6, lines 911–912, paraphrased)
Book 7
The Six Days of Creation
Adam asks: “Who made this beautiful world?”
Raphael answers: After Satan’s fall, God decided to create a new world to fill
the empty space and He sent the spirit of Jesus, with golden compasses, to
create this universe. He did all within six days:
Day 1- Light separated from
darkness.
Day 2- Firmament (sky).
Day 3- Dry land, plants, trees —
including the Tree of Life and Tree of Knowledge.
“Earth, now dry, brought forth grass, herb, and flower,
With fruit trees — and the Tree of Life
Stood in the midst, and next to it the Tree of Knowledge.”
(Book 7, lines 317–319)
Day 4- Sun, moon, stars — set in
motion. (The “eternal dance” suggests ordered
motion, not chaotic spinning.)
Day 5- Fish and birds.
Day 6- Beasts (Predation came after the Fall. In Eden, the
lion ate grass)
“The lion, the tiger, the bear — all gentle,
For no fear of death yet entered the world.”
(Book 7, lines 455–456)
Then Man —
Adam from dust:
“He formed thee, Adam, from the dust of the ground,
And breathed into thy nostrils the breath of life.
He made thee in His own image — with free will,
And reason, which is the soul’s governing power.”
(Book 7, lines 525–528)
And Eve
from Adam’s rib:
“He took a rib from Adam’s side, and closed the flesh.
From that rib he formed a woman — not from his head
To rule him, nor from his feet to be trampled,
But from his side to be equal, under his arm
To be protected.”
(Book 8, lines 494–498)
7.1- Adam’s Reaction
Adam weeps with wonder. Raphael warns again:
“Be lowly wise. Think only on your duty.”
Book 8
Raphael answers to Adam’s Questions
8.1- The Cosmos
Adam asks about the cosmos: Are the stars
other worlds? Does the Sun move? Raphael smiles and says: “God made the stars
for beauty, not for astrology. Ask not what Heaven does — obey.”
“Heaven is for God to know — ask not what
The stars do in their courses. Be lowly wise.”
(Book 8, lines 171–173)
8.2- Adam’s Autobiography
Adam tells about his own creation: he woke
under a shady bank, looked up, heard a voice (God’s), and walked. He named the
animals — each couple passed before him, and he saw their sexuality. He felt
lonely. God gave him Eve.
“I saw her — and my heart was lost in love.
Her beauty overwhelmed my senses, and I felt
A passion that almost overcame my reason.”
(Book 8, lines 477–479)
8.3- The Danger of Eve
Adam admits: Eve’s beauty sometimes overpowers
his reason. Raphael warns sharply: “Love with the soul, not the senses. If you
let passion rule, you will fall.” Adam defends his love as pure, but Raphael is
not convinced. He leaves as twilight falls.
Book 9
The Fall (The Central Tragedy)
The day after Raphael leaves, Satan returns to
Eden, enters a sleeping serpent. Eve suggests to work separately to cover more
ground. Adam warns: “The enemy may attack. Stay with me.” But Eve insists: “We
are not so weak. You doubt my virtue.” Adam yields — his first error.
“The enemy is near. He seeks to divide us.
Together we are strong; alone, we are vulnerable.”
(Book 9, lines 250–252)
9.1- Satan’s Temptation
Satan finds Eve alone by the Tree of
Knowledge. He flatters her — “Goddess of this world” — then argues: The Tree is
not dangerous; God forbade it to keep you lower; when you eat, you will become
divine. Eve hesitates, then eats.
“Wonder not, sovereign mistress of this world,
That I, a creature of lower nature, can speak
To you, the goddess of this garden.”
(Book 9, lines 532–534)
9.2- The Immediate Effect
She feels ecstasy, then fear. She thinks:
Should she tell Adam? If Adam gets another Eve, she will die. She decides to
share.
“If death follows, then Adam will get another Eve —
Better to die together than let him live with another.”
(Book 9, lines 827–828)
9.3- Adam’s Choice
Adam sees Eve holding the fruit. He is
horrified — but then makes a fatal choice: “I will die with you rather than
live alone.” He eats.
“I feel that I must die with you — I cannot live alone.
If you are fallen, I will fall with you.
We are one flesh; we will die together.”
(Book 9, lines 907–909)
9.4- The Consequences
Lust replaces
innocent love (they look at each other with desire, then shame).
Nakedness becomes
shameful (they sew fig leaves).
Blame erupts
(Adam blames Eve; Eve blames the serpent).
Tears and
mutual accusation.
The book ends: “They sat them down to weep;
nor only tears / Rained at their eyes, but high winds worse within.”
“They sat them down to weep; nor only tears
Rained at their eyes, but high winds worse within
Began to rise — passions of anger, hate, mistrust,
Suspicion and discord, the first fruits of sin.”
(Book 9, lines 1121–1124)



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