Platonic Love in John Milton's Comus

Plato, the most influential of all thinkers of ancient Greece, has exerted an astonishingly powerful effect on Western civilization and culture. In particular, European Renaissance writers and poets are greatly indebted to his doctrine of love, as discussed in detail in his Symposium. John Milton, t...

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Main Author: Masoud Rostami
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: University of Isfahan 2016-09-01
Series:Metaphysics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://mph.ui.ac.ir/article_21447_7a59dabcc7093fc06585b1a147385967.pdf
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author Masoud Rostami
author_facet Masoud Rostami
author_sort Masoud Rostami
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description Plato, the most influential of all thinkers of ancient Greece, has exerted an astonishingly powerful effect on Western civilization and culture. In particular, European Renaissance writers and poets are greatly indebted to his doctrine of love, as discussed in detail in his Symposium. John Milton, the last and one of the most illustrious figures of Renaissance ٍEurope and England, is no way out of Plato's sphere of leaden influence: everywhere in his work there are echoes and traces of Plato. The present essay seeks first to briefly study the concept of Platonic love and then attempts to examine young Milton's understanding of this doctrine and his practice of employing it in one of his early dramatic works, Comus, A Masque. Ultimately, the article can be best summarized by stating that Milton’s Mask play told what he had already learned about chastity and love and beauty from the Dialogues of Plato.
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spelling doaj.art-84eba58ee0804baea9de8b8bff7f207b2023-01-02T22:15:54ZfasUniversity of IsfahanMetaphysics2008-80862476-32762016-09-01822193010.22108/mph.2016.2144721447Platonic Love in John Milton's ComusMasoud Rostami0Assistant Professor, Department of English, Isfahan (Khorasgan) Branch, Islamic Azad University, Isfahan, IranPlato, the most influential of all thinkers of ancient Greece, has exerted an astonishingly powerful effect on Western civilization and culture. In particular, European Renaissance writers and poets are greatly indebted to his doctrine of love, as discussed in detail in his Symposium. John Milton, the last and one of the most illustrious figures of Renaissance ٍEurope and England, is no way out of Plato's sphere of leaden influence: everywhere in his work there are echoes and traces of Plato. The present essay seeks first to briefly study the concept of Platonic love and then attempts to examine young Milton's understanding of this doctrine and his practice of employing it in one of his early dramatic works, Comus, A Masque. Ultimately, the article can be best summarized by stating that Milton’s Mask play told what he had already learned about chastity and love and beauty from the Dialogues of Plato.http://mph.ui.ac.ir/article_21447_7a59dabcc7093fc06585b1a147385967.pdfPlatoPlatonic LoveSymposiumMiltonComus
spellingShingle Masoud Rostami
Platonic Love in John Milton's Comus
Metaphysics
Plato
Platonic Love
Symposium
Milton
Comus
title Platonic Love in John Milton's Comus
title_full Platonic Love in John Milton's Comus
title_fullStr Platonic Love in John Milton's Comus
title_full_unstemmed Platonic Love in John Milton's Comus
title_short Platonic Love in John Milton's Comus
title_sort platonic love in john milton s comus
topic Plato
Platonic Love
Symposium
Milton
Comus
url http://mph.ui.ac.ir/article_21447_7a59dabcc7093fc06585b1a147385967.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT masoudrostami platonicloveinjohnmiltonscomus