in Reception, Uncategorized

Milton as a Reader of Nicander

In Milton’s essay Of Education we learn that if only we should teach children, in addition to the usual arts and sciences, ‘the helpful experience of hunters, fowlers, fisherman, shepherds, gardners, apothecaries,’ then ‘those poets which are now counted most hard will be both facile and pleasant: Orpheus, Hesiod, Theocritus, Aratus, Nicander, Oppian, Dionysius, and in Latin, Lucretius, Manilius, and the rural part of Virgil.’

It comes as no surprise then when we find Nicander creeping up in book X of Paradise Lost. Satan has returned triumphantly to Hell and makes a self-congratulatory speech which doesn’t go over quite so well. Note, particularly, the list of snakes, which even includes a scorpion, from verses 524-529:

  1. So having said, awhile he stood expecting
  2. Their universal shout and high applause
  3. To fill his ear; when, contrary, he hears
  4. On all sides from innumerable tongues
  5. A dismal universal hiss, the sound
  6. Of public scorn. He wonder’d, but not long
  7. Had leisure, wond’ring at himself now more:
  8. His visage drawn he felt to sharp and spare,
  9. His arms clung to his ribs, his legs entwining
  10. Each other till, supplanted, down he fell
  11. A monstrous serpent on his belly prone,
  12. Reluctant but in vain: a greater power
  13. Now rul’d him, punish’d in the shape he sinn’d,
  14. According to his doom. He would have spoke,
  15. But hiss for hiss return’d with forked tongue
  16. To forked tongue; for now were all transform’d
  17. Alike, to serpents all, as accessories
  18. To his bold riot. Dreadful was the din
  19. Of hissing through the hall, thick-swarming now
  20. With complicated monsters, head and tail:
  21. Scorpion and asp and amphisbaena dire,
  22. Cerastes horn’d, hydrus, and ellops drear,
  23. And dipsas (not so thick swarm’d once the soil
  24. Bedropp’d with blood of Gorgon, or the isle
  25. Ophiusa); but still greatest he, the midst,
  26. Now dragon grown, larger than whom the sun
  27. Engender’d in the Pythian vale on slime,
  28. Huge Python; and his power no less he seem’d
  29. Above the rest still to retain. They all
  30. Him follow’d, issuing forth to th’ open field,
  31. Where all yet left of that revolted rout,
  32. Heav’n-fall’n, in station stood or just array,
  33. Sublime with expectation when to see
  34. In triumph issuing forth their glorious Chief.
  35. They saw, but other sight instead–a crowd
  36. Of ugly serpents. Horror on them fell,
  37. And horrid sympathy; for what they saw
  38. They felt themselves now changing. Down their arms,
  39. Down fell both spear and shield, down they as fast;
  40. And the dire hiss renew’d, and the dire form
  41. Catch’d by contagion, like in punishment
  42. As in their crime. Thus was th’ applause they meant
  43. Turn’d to exploding hiss, triumph to shame
  44. Cast on themselves from their own mouths. There stood
  45. A grove hard by, sprung up with this their change
  46. (His will who reigns above) to aggravate
  47. Their penance, laden with fair fruit, like that
  48. Which grew in Paradise, the bait of Eve
  49. Us’d by the Tempter. …

Milton has clearly read Apollonius, Nicander, and Lucan.

If only more of us had been educated in his manner, we’d more easily see the allusion.