This document summarizes an article by John Rumrich titled "Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos" published in PMLA in 1995. The article argues that Milton's representation of chaos in Paradise Lost does not depict chaos as intrinsically hostile to God or creation, going against traditional interpretations. It claims Milton had a profound appreciation of chaotic indeterminacy, which distinguished his theology, politics, and aesthetics. The article compares Milton's creation narrative to that in the ancient Babylonian epic Enuma Elish, which scholars often reference in relation to Milton's work.
This document summarizes an article by John Rumrich titled "Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos" published in PMLA in 1995. The article argues that Milton's representation of chaos in Paradise Lost does not depict chaos as intrinsically hostile to God or creation, going against traditional interpretations. It claims Milton had a profound appreciation of chaotic indeterminacy, which distinguished his theology, politics, and aesthetics. The article compares Milton's creation narrative to that in the ancient Babylonian epic Enuma Elish, which scholars often reference in relation to Milton's work.
This document summarizes an article by John Rumrich titled "Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos" published in PMLA in 1995. The article argues that Milton's representation of chaos in Paradise Lost does not depict chaos as intrinsically hostile to God or creation, going against traditional interpretations. It claims Milton had a profound appreciation of chaotic indeterminacy, which distinguished his theology, politics, and aesthetics. The article compares Milton's creation narrative to that in the ancient Babylonian epic Enuma Elish, which scholars often reference in relation to Milton's work.
This document summarizes an article by John Rumrich titled "Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos" published in PMLA in 1995. The article argues that Milton's representation of chaos in Paradise Lost does not depict chaos as intrinsically hostile to God or creation, going against traditional interpretations. It claims Milton had a profound appreciation of chaotic indeterminacy, which distinguished his theology, politics, and aesthetics. The article compares Milton's creation narrative to that in the ancient Babylonian epic Enuma Elish, which scholars often reference in relation to Milton's work.
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Souvce FMLA, VoI. 110, No. 5 |Ocl., 1995), pp. 1035-1046 FuIIisIed I Modern Language Association SlaIIe UBL http://www.jstor.org/stable/463028 . Accessed 16/07/2013 1023 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. . Modern Language Association is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to PMLA. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions John Rumrich Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos JOHN RUMRICH, associate professor of English at the Uni- versity of Texas, Austin, teaches Shakespeare and Milton and serves as associate editor of Texas Studies in Literature and Language. A version of this essay forms part of a book- length study, Milton Unbound, forthcoming from Cambridge University Press. There were to be five great proofs of the existence of chaos, of which the first was the absence of God. The other four could surely be located. The work of defini- tion and explication could, if done nicely enough, occupy the angels forever, as the contrary work has occupied human theologians. But there is not much en- thusiasm for chaos among the angels. Donald Barthelme R EMARKABLY LITTLE has been written on Chaos in Par- adise Lost, though the epic, as Robert Adams observes, "does make it necessary for us to look at Chaos, or think of Chaos, again and again" (75). The few who address the subject tend to argue that as an al- legorical character Chaos represents a condition that is neutral and pas- sive or, more extremely, ominous and evil.1 A. B. Chambers, for example, insists in a classic essay that "Chaos and Night are the enemies of God," "opposed to him only less than hell itself" (65, 69)-a charge that seems indisputable since in book 2 Chaos expresses interest in the destruction of created order. And yet, accepting the alliance of Chaos and Satan at face value raises problems. Milton's metaphysics were monistic and materialist, and in Paradise Lost chaos represents "the Womb of Nature" that contains "dark materials to create more Worlds" (2.911, 2.916). If the poet conceived of this matrix as intrinsically hostile to God and cre- ation, any attempt at theodicy would seem pointless. N. J. Girardot observes that historically myth and religious thought make a "dualistic distinction" between "the absolutely sacred and cre- ative being of a transcendent 'kindlier' God, on the one hand, and the utterly profane nothingness and nonbeing of a passively neutral or ac- tively belligerent chaos" (214).2 Similarly, in assessing the break of post- modem chaos theory with previous attitudes toward chaos, N. Katherine Hayles writes that "creation myths in the West, from the Babylonian epic Enuma elish to Milton's Paradise Lost, depict chaos as a negative state, 1035 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos a disordered void which must be conquered for creation to occur" (Introduction 2). Yet even in re- ceived traditions of the dualistic West, there are al- ternatives to these depictions: "The apparently fundamental contrast between chaos and cosmos may reveal more of a dialectical relationship... In the broadest sense, chaos stands for the root 'oth- erness' and 'strangeness' of existence and the ironic indeterminacy of all human constructs" (Girardot 214). Contemporary philosophy and science are particularly aware of such ironic indeterminacy. Whether the subject of investigation is language, light, matter, or human subjectivity, postmodern theorists usually find that phenomena, except when considered from an artificially narrow perspective, are not equal to themselves, that they are consti- tuted in various ways by alterity.3 Postmoderisms thus react against the tendency to reduce "the dif- ferent and the changing" to "the identical and the permanent" (Prigogine and Stengers 293). This essay argues that an awareness of ironic in- determinacy is implicit throughout Paradise Lost; Milton recognized that identity and otherness are always mixed. Scholars who note that indetermi- nacy springing from chaos is pervasive in Paradise Lost-"built into the very structure of the cosmos"- characterize chaos as insidiously evil, as "discord, passivity, weakness ... an intimate, and ultimately invincible enemy" (Adams 85). My discussion draws on twentieth-century chaos theory to suggest instead that a profound appreciation of chaotic in- determinacy distinguishes Milton's idiosyncratic theology, political theory, and aesthetics. I compare Milton's representation of creation with the one in the Enuma elish because the ancient epic has be- come a telling point of reference for Milton schol- ars, as Hayles's generalization confirms, as well as for feminist critics of patriarchy (Daly; Keller). Those who describe Milton's chaos and its influ- ence in creation as passively ominous or actively evil not only acquiesce in a narrative impression left early in the epic; they also unjustifiably assume Milton's endorsement of traditional Western philo- sophical and religious attitudes toward matter. The occidental bias against matter reflects the theology and political environment of early Chris- tianity. The church fathers dammed up some of Christianity's deepest Hellenistic tributaries by concluding that matter was not intrinsically evil. To have followed Neoplatonic philosophies by desig- nating matter innately evil would have meant es- tablishing a dualistic religion. Dualist doctrine places matter outside God's dominion, precluding belief in a single omnipotent deity and undermin- ing faith in any order, cosmic or civil, for those who live in a material world. Hence, according to the Augustinian ontology that dominated Christian ethics from the fourth century through Milton's time, evil is not substantial but volitional, a willful estrangement from the divine source of all being. Decay into nothingness looms as the ultimate out- come of that estrangement. The early church thus deemed matter acceptable, as passive stuff created by God from nothing and then ordered into shape. Instead of inherent malignancy, it was proximity to nothingness that explained matter's sinful tenden- cies. As Dennis Danielson demonstrates, seven- teenth-century religious writing on the creation fairly crackles with the ominous moral charge of "nothing" (33-43). The preoccupation with nothing went beyond theology to pervade Renaissance culture. Spenser's description of humanity's original clay as "base, vile, and next to nought" assumes there are ethical dangers in the vicinity of nonexistence (Hymne of Heavenly Love [Minor Poems 106]). Indeed, in Renaissance English naught and naughty have a remarkably pejorative force, and texts of the pe- riod engage obsessively in sexual wordplay on nothing. The word accumulates apocalyptic signif- icance in King Lear, where the threat of nothing finds its most profound expression. While Christian orthodoxy may have acknowl- edged this Neoplatonic thing of darkness as its own, therefore, it also reckoned ontologically precarious matter and the virtues associated with it to be mar- ginal and inferior-Sancho Panzas or Spenserian dwarves among possible goods4 Furthermore, mat- ter in the form of human flesh was thought to require discipline and direction before it could achieve even these lowly virtues. For Plato "the mother and receptacle," or "mother substance," must be forcefully persuaded to accept form, inso- far as it can (Timaeus 51a-b). His widely influential apology for material creations also portrays stub- born original matter as ugly and malignant: "God 1036 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions John Rumrich made them as far as possible the fairest and best, out of things which were not fair and good" (53b). Eschewing dualism in theory, Augustinian Chris- tianity sponsored in practice an ethical dualism suited to the imperial government of church and state (Pagels 98-126). The ruling principle of spirit or mind was associated with the masculine, and matter was, as in Plato, identified as a feminine and maternal principle that required formal, hierar- chical control. Analogously, the boisterous masses were believed naturally to need correction and di- rection before they could aspire to the appropriate minor virtues. Such doctrine and discipline re- mained a commonplace of political theory through- out the English Renaissance.5 A corresponding bias against the first matter runs through mainstream seventeenth-century commen- taries on biblical creation. Typically, they deploy classical terminology and, like Milton, designate the realm of the first matter by the pagan term chaos (Danielson 28-49). Chaos so often appears in these commentaries to mean the same thing as the first matter that the two terms cannot clearly be differentiated. Chaos means primarily the limitless place-a vast gulf or abyss-filled with the first matter and, by extension, also the utterly confused condition of that matter. Indeterminacy of extent or constitution is central to both meanings. Disdain for the unsightly and obstinate matter of chaos is evident both in seventeenth-century reli- gious writing and among Milton's literary precur- sors. Joshua Sylvester's influential 1605 translation of du Bartas's La semaine depicts "Chaos most di- forme" as "an ugly medly" and "profound Abisse, / Full of Disorder and fell mutinies" (9-11). Writing in 1621, the prelate-poet John Andrewes describes the chaotic first matter as "an empty, rude, un- shapen, and indigested lump" (43). Cromwell's chaplain, Peter Sterry, observes that man is consti- tuted by form and matter, which correspond to "the light of God, and his own proper darkness," "the darkness or nothingness, which is the Creatures own, is the proper ground of sin" (Danielson 38). In The Faerie Queene, Spenser, Milton's most ac- knowledged poetic influence, portrays chaos as "the wide wombe of the world" that lies "in hateful darknesse and in deepe horrore" (3.6.36).6 Spen- ser's Hymne in Honour of Love states that the world "out of great Chaos ugly prison crept" (Minor Poems 58). Joseph Beaumont, an exponent of the Spenserian poetic line, imagines the original mat- ter-"one single step / From simple nothing"-as wallowing "in the gulf of its own monstrous Dark- ness" (Kirkconnell 116). The dark deformity of chaos was also a standard tenet of natural philosophy from the thirteenth to the eighteenth century, as the encyclopedic tradition surveyed by Kester Svendsen confirms (52-53). Divine love set the warring elements of nature at peace in an order defining beauty: "Ayre hated earth, and water hated fyre," writes Spenser, "Till Love relented their rebellious yre" (Hymne in Hon- our of Love [Minor Poems 83-84]). A unifying principle of English Renaissance culture was that the violence of chaos returns when love is absent. Thus Romeo invokes a scientific-theological para- dox to express the dissonance of his experience of love in the midst of civil strife: Why then, O brawling love! O loving hate! O any thing, of nothing first [create]! O heavy lightness, serious vanity, Misshapen chaos of well [-seeming] forms ... (1.1.176-79; brackets in orig.) Similarly, in a private observation that foretells the domestic and societal discord to follow, Othello attributes cosmogonic force to his bond with Des- demona: "when I love thee not, / Chaos is come again" (3.3.91-92). In striking contrast to the often harsh disapproval of chaos in Renaissance theology, science, and lit- erary culture, Milton in Christian Doctrine de- scribes the confused, disordered first matter as good in itself and the necessary basis of a good creation: It is, I say, a demonstration of God's supreme power and goodness that he should not shut up this hetero- geneous and substantial virtue within himself, but should disperse, propagate and extend it as far as, and in whatever way, he wills. For this original matter was not an evil thing, nor to be thought of as worthless: it was good, and it contained the seeds of all subsequent good. It was a substance, and could only have been derived from the source of all substance. It was in a confused and disordered state at first, but afterwards God made it ordered and beautiful. (308) 1037 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos In Milton's heretical theology a benevolent God takes the place of ominous nothingness as matter's source. Paradise Lost is not always consistent within itself, much less with Christian Doctrine, and its perspectives on chaos vary. Yet as the realm of the good first matter, chaos should not appear to be God's enemy, not if Milton's theology of matter has any bearing on Paradise Lost. The dualistic case against chaos in Paradise Lost is nonetheless strong. Indeterminate by defi- nition, chaos has no boundaries, no circumscribing form, and in Milton's narrative, creation occurs at the moment when the creator institutes determi- nate boundaries: Thus farr extend, thus farr thy bounds, This be thy just Circumference, O World. Thus God the Heav'n created, thus the Earth.... (7.230-32) It seems inevitable that chaos should appear sym- bolically, if not theologically, as anticreation as well as antecreation. One way to negotiate this apparent impasse be- tween Milton's poetry and his religious doctrine is to discount the pertinence of his theology to "the realm of symbols" (Schwartz 33). Locating in ancient Mesopotamian traditions symbolic precedent for scriptural prohibitions against transgressing created order, Regina Schwartz argues that these values in- form Paradise Lost at a more basic and symboli- cally meaningful level than Milton's theological principles do (24, 26). It is possible, however, to take account of the allegorical character Chaos and narrative facts concerning chaos without resorting to the claim that Milton in his poetry contradicts fundamental principles of his monistic theology. In Schwartz's reading, failure to observe the boundaries established at creation affronts the cre- ator and partakes of the indeterminacy of chaos, "a greater threat in Milton's moral universe than the Satanic one of a definite willed disobedience" (18). But scrupulous observance of limits and bound- aries, as scripture enjoins through the ceremonial and dietary law, is in Paradise Lost linked not to the sanctity of unfallen creation but to loss, fallen- ness, and makeshift safeguards against further en- croachment by sin. The categories of sacred and profane affect discussion of the forbidden fruit only when the nearly fallen Adam advances a pharisaic justification for his projected sin: [P]erhaps the Fact Is not so hainous now, foretasted Fruit, Profan'd first by the Serpent, by him first Made common and unhallowd ere our taste.... (9.928-31) The holiness of the garden, destined "haunt of Seales and Orcs," has little bearing on the decision to evict Adam and Eve. As Michael insists, "God attributes to place / No sanctitie," at least not to place in and of itself (11.835-37). Similarly, Milton traces the dichotomy of clean and unclean deriving from shame and the recognition of nakedness to a postlapsarian point of origin, not to the original order (9.1091-98). In the unfallen world remembrance of creation and praise of the creator do not evoke what Michael calls the "servil fear" of trespass fostered by "strict Laws" (12.304-05). Synesthetic confusion abounds in Milton's heaven, where ordinary limits are meant to be overcome with ease. Spirits can "either Sex as- sume, or both" (1.424); "all Heart they live, all Head, all Eye, all Eare, / All Intellect, all Sense," with no anatomical restriction of function (6.350-51). An- gels literally smell good news coming (3.135-37). Observance of boundaries even coincides with transgression where "full measure onely bounds / excess," and celebrations are most regular "when most irregular they seem" (5.639-40, 5.624). The angels who venture past the gates of heaven to in- vestigate creation and to glorify God thus indulge in "no excess / That reaches blame, but rather mer- its praise / The more it seems excess" (3.696-98). Small wonder that Gabriel glows with anger when Satan calls him a "limitarie Cherube" (4.971). Boundaries do play a crucial role in Miltonic cre- ation. As in present-day chaos theory, however, they allow for productive and dynamic disorder within the framework of an evolving, larger order (Pri- gogine and Stengers 287-306). Boundaries estab- lish a space "between order and disorder ... where previously there was only bifurcation" (Hayles, Chaos Bound 27). The inspired authorial voice of Paradise Lost expresses the desire to cross bound- aries, which, though recognized as risky, consis- tently appears noble and godlike. In the realm of 1038 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions John Rumrich love, also risky, a comparison of human and an- gelic sex suggests that the more refined the crea- ture, the more obviously the impulse to join recalls the boundless elemental mix. Angelic partners ex- perience their amorous pleasure in completely crossing the boundary between them. Apocalyptic love-when "God shall be All in All" (3.341)-un- mistakably reflects the wild energy of chaos, as the consciousness of what was once formal "restraint" inspires an endlessly "luxurious" profusion of plea- sure and joy (9.209). This sense of the apocalypse is not unique to Paradise Lost. The reward envi- sioned for Milton's beloved Diodati, for example, is furious with bacchanalian pleasure: "Cantus ubi, choreisque furit lyra mista beatis, I Festa Sionaeo bacchantur & Orgia Thyrso" 'where there is singing, where the lyre revels madly, mingled with choirs beatific, and festal orgies run riot, in bacchante fashion, with the thyrsus of Zion' (Epitaphium Da- monis 218-19). The chronology of the end time ex- plicitly draws on descriptions of chaos: "beyond is all abyss, / Eternitie, whose end no eye can reach" (PL 12.555-56). Far from being invariably hostile to creation, the energy of chaos seems vitally involved with crea- tures' aspirations and erotic desires. To be sure, from Satan's perspective in book 2, the state of chaos appears warlike. This early description does not in- validate the erotic associations of chaos, however. Like battle, sex requires its participants to mix it up, so to speak, a chiastic intersection that a Ho- meric Raphael acknowledges when in a single line he uses a single verb-"meet"-for both loving and fighting (6.93).7 Yet Milton scholarship has charac- teristically defined relations between the disorder of chaos and the order of God exclusively as ad- versarial: "the war in heaven is only the beginning, not the end, of the battle against Chaos. It is fought again at creation, at the fall, with Cain and Abel, at Babel and the flood; all of human history is played out on this battlefield" (Schwartz 38). This synopsis is selective, however, even as a description of the fallen order. Satan's embrace of Sin precedes the war in heaven; Adam and Eve's lust produces Cain; Cain's daughters seduce the sons of God; the union of these couples brings forth the warlike giants- and so on and so on: "lust hard by hate," as Milton's bawdy diction has it (1.417). The construction of chaotic disorder as belliger- ence destructive to civilization indicates that the concept of chaos has political ramifications in ad- dition to its religious and ethical ones.8 Mythologi- cally, narratives that feature the violent defeat and "permanent suppression" of a hostile chaos often function to celebrate "the heroic finality of some authoritarian order" (Girardot 216). The Enuma elish is such a myth. A Babylonian creation epic that influenced the Genesis account, it has been cited as the ultimate mythological source of Mil- ton's martial representation of chaos (Schwartz 26- 31). Milton's account of creation differs from the Enuma elish, however, by presenting nonviolence where the Babylonian story proposes violence. During the creation narrative in Paradise Lost, chaos is described as "outrageous" and "wild," with "furious winds / And surging waves" that move the divine Word to describe it as "troubl'd" (7.212-16). The peace he bids it is such peace as might quiet stormy waters, however, not foes at war. And the arms that the creator wields against his chaotic sea of troubles are not the thunder and terror that he uses to blast the enemy angels but his ministering word and "golden Compasses," which are meant to circumscribe, not defeat, the materials for a new world (7.225). By contrast, Marduk, the heroic creator in the Enuma elish, butchers the maternal chaos deity, Tiamat, and builds creation out of the pieces. Scholarly examination of the textual record has re- vealed that, like Perseus among the Greeks, Marduk emerges in his heroic role during the period when a patriarchal order of kingship established itself throughout the Near East (Ricoeur 176).9 The Enuma elish thus betrays an impulse to ground the patriarchal order of kingship in cosmic hierarchy, affording monarchical prerogative divine right. Admittedly, the peace-wishing creator in Paradise Lost also suppresses chaos, but his suppression is temporary, and once creation has occurred, chaos is left as boundless and wild as the creator found it, always available to substantiate alternatives to the established order (2.915-16). For Milton, politicized constructions of chaos would have been evident not only in ancient my- thologies but also in seventeenth-century absolut- ist ideologies that he combated. Richard III, who 1039 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos was viewed by Tudor propagandists as a living symbol of the evil strife quieted by their divinely appointed monarchs, has a body shaped "[l]ike to a chaos" in Shakespeare's depiction (Henry VI, Part 3 3.2.161). In Troilus and Cressida Ulysses fa- mously insists that violation of social hierarchy in- evitably produces the "mere oppugnancy" of chaos in every realm of order, from the personal to the cosmic (1.3.111). In Leviathan Hobbes also invokes chaos to deplore the consequences of rebellion: When Christian men, take not their Christian Sover- aign, for God's prophet ... they must suffer them- selves to bee lead ... by some fellow subjects, that can bewitch them by slander of the government, into rebellion . . . and by this means destroying all laws, both divine and humane, reduce all Order, Govern- ment, and Society, to the first Chaos of Violence, and Civill Warre. (299) For Hobbes rebellion against the sovereign returns society to a state of chaotic violence. In a moment worthy of Marduk he maintains that the "natural punishment" for such rebellion is "slaughter" (254). In Milton's epic the person who most desires to establish "some authoritarian order" and definitively to suppress chaos is Satan. Ironically, Satan's rebel- lion against God's authority is sparked by the an- nouncement of a change that he takes as detrimental to his hierarchical position (5.659-65). Once fallen, the rebel angels are inclined to rigidity and parodic orderliness-the correlatives of their fixed opposi- tion to God-and their increasingly obdurate bod- ies, though susceptible to wounds and pain, are apparently no longer supple enough for them to make love (4.509-11). Instead, they occupy them- selves with place and status, boundary and limit, and observe the externals of distinction with punc- tilious grandiosity or servility. Not surprisingly, then, Satan's successful mission on earth impairs chaos. Satan's child Death uses a "Mace petrific" to fix the once indeterminate mat- ter, now "bound with Gorgonian rigor not to move," and secures the structure "with Pinns of Adamant / And Chains," making "all fast, too fast" (10.294, 10.297, 10.318-19). The comparison of Death strik- ing chaos to the tyrannical Xerxes whipping "th' indignant waves" of the Hellespont underscores the absolutist aspect of this massive edifice (10.306-10). Double-crossed Chaos responds with ire to the mortised rigor of Death's "Pontiface" (10.348): [O]n either side Disparted Chaos over built exclaim'd, And with rebounding surge the barrs assaild, That scornd his indignation.... (10.415-18) Chaos cannot undo the division to his realm now "disparted." The fall has imposed new order on his realm: the tyrannically oppressive structure of evil.10 The Satanic suppression of chaos-in which Death appears as the ultimate silencing of ironic indeterminacy-echoes in Milton's epic version of biblical history when Nimrod erects a great tower. "Though of Rebellion others he accuse," setting the example followed by tyrants of future ages, Nimrod is himself the rebel-"Above his Brethren to him- self assuming / Autoritie usurpt" and warring on "such as refuse / Subjection to his Empire tyran- nous" (12.37, 12.65-66, 12.31-32). God responds derisively to Nimrod by reaffirming the power of chaos against the architectural symbol of the ty- rant's presumption: [G]reat laughter was in Heav'n And looking down, to see the hubbub strange And hear the din; thus was the building left Ridiculous, and the work Confusion nam'd. (12.59-62) The connection with chaos sounds distinctly in "the din," "the hubbub strange," and the "confu- sion" enforced by God on those who would ignore what Girardot calls the "ironic indeterminacy of all human constructs" (cf. PL 2.951, 2.1040, 2.897). Raphael imagines a similar if milder response by God to the theoretical impositions of Ptolemaic as- tronomers who contrive "to save appearances" and to protect the political ideologies that, as Galileo learned, rely on appearances (8.81). In attempting to deny or suppress indeterminacy, tyrants become vulnerable to God's derision-as well as to the in- evitable vengeance of chaos. The most memorable edifices in Milton's works -the bridge across chaos, Pandemonium, and Nimrod's tower-are monolithic and tyrannical in aspect and at least implicitly targets of heaven's 1040 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions John Rumrich scorn. A contrary architectural effort, envisioned in Areopagitica, is that of the temple of truth: [W]hen every stone is laid artfully together, it cannot be united into a continuity, it can but be contiguous in this world; neither can every piece of the building be of one form; nay rather the perfection consists in this, that out of many moderate varieties and brotherly dis- similitudes that are not vastly disproportional, arises the goodly and graceful symmetry that commends the whole pile and structure. (555) The temple cannot be built without the discord of sects or without tolerance of them, though a tyrant might attempt to impose uniformity. Furthermore, the structure includes disorder and disproportion, since the order of truth grows out of "brotherly dis- similitudes." For Milton the created order of mate- rial being in time cannot advance without disorder. Politically as well as symbolically, then, Milton's epic depiction of the pervasive influence of chaos seems consistent with his theology of matter. But strong narrative evidence of the malignancy of chaos remains. The anarch supports Satan's mis- sion and menacingly proclaims, "Havoc and spoil and ruin are my gain" (2.1008). For this reason Wil- liam Empson says that Denis Saurat's identification of preexistent matter with God in Paradise Lost "makes nonsense of most of [the] narrative" (144). Moreover, Milton chose to represent chaos through allegory in an increasingly nominalist and antischo- lastic seventeenth-century intellectual climate, in which allegorical narrative had become "an ideal vehicle for presenting deficient ontology," as Ste- phen Fallon writes (182). Milton thus seems to bol- ster formally the notion that chaos is an enemy of divine creation. And yet, for the materialist Milton, deficient on- tology does not necessarily imply a loss of being that results from evil. The ontological deficiency of chaos indicates instead a material potency that is the precondition of creation. Whereas Augustine had no equivalent of chaos in his philosophy be- cause he believed in creation ex nihilo, Milton, an exponent of creation ex deo, believes that the realm of potential creation possesses a shadowy existence of its own. In a realm prior to creation, any onto- logical lack conveyed by Milton's allegory means only that the matter has not yet undergone crea- tion. The realm or state of being that Chaos speaks for would profit from the uncreation-not the per- version-of the world, since his anarchy would be augmented. Empson's narrative-based objection to chaos ignores the principle that "allegorical agents reveal by their actions not internal psychologies but the abstractions ... that lie behind them" (Fal- lon 173). The other-speaking polysemy of allegory, "leaning away at various oblique angles from sol- dierly directness," as Gordon Teskey writes, makes it an ideal mode for expressing the ironic indeter- minacy of chaos (398). In Milton's allegory chaos thus represents an indeterminate material principle whose complex disorder persists dynamically in any order. One consequence of a creation that originates in and in- cludes indeterminacy is that certain knowledge is impossible, even among the angels." They can be and regularly are tricked, mistaken, or befuddled so that at critical moments they stand passive, not knowing what to do despite God's announcements. At one of the most crucial points in the poem, a touchy and less than efficacious Gabriel misreads or only partially understands the significance of a sign displayed in the heavens by God, who is com- pared to a "careful Plowman doubting" what action to take (4.983). The consequence of this most un- fathomable moment is that Satan goes free, his ap- prehension by the angelic guard neutralized. The excessive appearance of Eve, whose "loveli- ness" makes her seem superior to Adam, even "ab- solute," though she is supposed to be his inferior, richly conveys this sense that things are constitu- tionally unpredictable (see 8.534-59). Eve is eroti- cally perplexing to Adam, more puzzling than the vast heavens in their apparent excessiveness. His confusion over Eve's elaborate "Ornament" dis- tinctly echoes his confusion over the "incompre- hensible ... disproportions" of celestial motions: why should a good creation appear excessive at the cosmic or the human level (8.20-27)? Raphael never seems less adept than when he recommends that Adam flay Eve's "outside" and see how it alters her person for the worse (8.568).2 This tactlessness is also doctrinally suspect, since Adam has just in- formed the angel that Eve is born from the womb of Adam's flesh and is shaped in the image of his 1041 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos heart's desire. As in Milton's theological descrip- tion of the first matter, she contains the seed "of all subsequent good." The capacity of her "fruitful Womb" to bring forth "multitudes" and eventually the savior, her "Seed," makes Eve the human coun- terpart of chaos, vital to the defeat of Satan's tyr- anny (5.388, 4.474, 10.1031). Even if Milton had not called chaos a womb,13 its generative capacity would be apparent in the pattern that Satan follows during his violent encounter with chaos, an intensely recursive pattern that pervades his activity in Paradise Lost. When he persuades his daughter to open gates that should remain closed, the "impetuous recoile and jarring sound," the noise of "Harsh Thunder," and the "redounding smoak and ruddy flame" that spew into the abyss recall the firing of Satan's artillery during the war in heaven (2.880, 2.882, 2.889). The fabrication and use of that artillery, which are paradigms of Satan's modus operandi, anticipate the imperial construction of Pandemonium. Satan mines the "originals of Nature in thir crude / Conception," intruding on the womb of heaven and then perverting "with suttle Art" the natural process by which these originals would have been transformed into gems and gold (6.511-13). The discharge of Satan's "deep-throated Engins" into the air, which "all her entrails tore," recalls the birth of Death, who "breaking violent way / Tore through [Sin's] entrails" (6.586, 6.588, 2.782-83). Sin's entry into being follows the same pattern; she explodes with flame from the original womb of evil-Satan's imagination. With the cooperation of his children, then, Satan fires himself out of the "hollow Abyss" of hell and into chaos, the first locale he is said to "tempt" (2.518, 2.404). He intrudes on "the secrets of the hoarie deep," until yet another fiery blast propels him, and he arrives in the vicinity of the allegorical anarch. As in his temptation of Eve, Satan lies to achieve his ends, promising rewards of chaotic disorder when in fact he will impose the tyranny of evil through his son. Continuing the pattern of uter- ine intrusion and abortive, explosive birth, Satan departs from chaos "like a Pyramid of fire" and proceeds to violate a series of enclosed spaces, in- cluding the womb of Eve's imagination, where he is compared to gunpowder that ignites before be- ing stored in its "Tun" (2.1013, 4.816). At last he reaches the "sweet recess of Eve" and accomplishes his mission (9.456). Though no more inclined to wickedness than Chaos is, Eve makes a likely target for Satan be- cause of the lethal potential of her womb as a weapon against God. The tempter is lured to her just as he was originally drawn to the womb lying beneath the surface of heaven for its destructive potency. Satan's explosive invention betrays his tyrannical and envious desire to usurp creative po- tency and direct it to destructive ends. Although the produce of Eve's womb is typically compared to fruit, not explosive charges, Satan eventually accomplishes the fatal metamorphosis of her chil- dren into "food for powder," in Falstaff's ruthless phrasing (Henry IV, Part 1 4.2.65). Satan's evil eminence manifests itself precisely in this tendency to foul things at their generative seat, according to the narrator: [F]or whence, But from the Author of all ill could Spring So deep a malice, to confound the race Of mankind in one root, and Earth with hell To mingle and involve.... (2.380-84) Maternal Eve is Milton's human symbol of the chaotic potency of the first matter. As W. B. C. Wat- kins suggests, "[M]atter is to all intents and pur- poses the feminine aspect of God" (63). Although in Paradise Lost the state of chaos is spoken for by a masculine anarch, his rule is no rule; he expresses an absence of control. Chaos is the realm of "Eldest Night" (2.894), even though like Eve in the pres- ence of Raphael, Night never utters a word during the anarch's conference with Satan. It is the "Scep- ter of old Night" that divine creation has weakened, and it is her standard that Satan promises to erect in reducing the world "to her original darkness" (2.1002, 2.984). Her relatively voluble masculine companion represents only the anarchic lack of a principle of determinative force and government. The consort to this absence of control, "Eternal Night" is not merely "old," she is "unessential," "uncreated," "unoriginal"-that is, without begin- ning (3.18, 2.1002, 2.439, 2.150, 10.477). The ety- mology of anarch, a term Milton seems to have coined from the Greek an-arkhe, indicates that the 1042 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions John Rumrich eternal night of chaos is without beginning as well as without rule. Milton's God calls the abyss infi- nite and boundless: "Boundless the Deep, because I am who fill / Infinitude" (7.168-69). By using the scripturally authoritative "I am," as he also does when he introduces himself to Adam-"Whom thou soughtst I am" (8.316)-God indicates that he describes himself as well as chaos. If the deep is infinite, eternal, and boundless, how can it also be Night's realm and be feminine? I suggest that chaos is God's womb, essential to his deity. God is the confused and dark matter of chaos even as he is the creative virtue of light.'4 Schwartz stresses Chaos's "unstable visage" to convey the lack of definition of his anarchy (18) but fails to note that the face is not represented as disfigured or discomposed-as Satan's is on "Ni- phates top" (3.742) or as Adam's and Eve's are after the Fall. Instead, Chaos's visage is "incom- pos'd," as God's essence is "increate" (2.989, 3.6; my italics). The anarch represents the infinite ma- terial dimension of God, which has not yet been ordained for creation. Without such material po- tency in God, there could not be creation ex deo.'s Alone among Milton scholars Walter Clyde Curry seriously entertains the idea that chaos might be an essential dimension of God. Curry acknowledges that the antitrinitarian Milton terms chaos infinite, limitless, boundless, and eternal and that Milton assigns these traits in poetry and doctrine solely to God. Yet Curry does not accept the inference: "could ... matter, the substrate of all created things, [be] a 'part' or a diversification of God's essence? If so, Milton cannot escape the charge of being a rank materialist and a pantheist" (34-35). The argument begs the question: chaos cannot be infinite and thus essential to God because "only God is infinite" (145). The adjective "rank," moreover, neatly sums up the contempt that materialism has historically elicited within orthodox Christianity and suggests why chaos in Paradise Lost has been devalued. The allegorical character of Chaos speaks for the part of the deity, arguably feminine, over which the eternal father does not exercise control, from which, in other words, the father is absent as an ac- tive, governing agent. God's maternal dimension is highlighted in his self-revelation before creation in Milton's epic: Boundless the Deep, because I am who fill Infinitude, nor vacuous the space Though I uncircumscrib'd my self retire, And put not forth my goodness, which is free To act or not, Necessitie and Chance Approach not mee, and what I will is Fate. (7.168-73) Chaos is boundless and infinite because God fills it. Chaos is "not vacuous"-that is, it continues to be filled-although God refrains from being there as a governing agent. How can God both fill the space and not be there? Perhaps the terms "my self" and "my goodness" do not refer to all of God, just as "I am who fill infinitude" or "Whom thou sought'st I am" do not. Although God's self-his actualized, volitional persona-is absent from chaos, "the heterogeneous and substantial virtue" of his material potency remains, filling the infinite (Christian Doctrine 308). Milton's materialist understanding of the deity is implicitly paradoxical. God cannot take control of his material potency without sacrificing his free- dom of will and sovereignty, as Milton insists in Christian Doctrine: "God cannot rightly be called Actus Purus, or pure actuality ... for thus he could do nothing except what he does do, and he would do that of necessity, although in fact he is omnipo- tent and utterly free in his actions" (145-46). If God's potential rests latent in unformed matter, chaos should be recognized as the realm that sub- stantiates his sovereignty.16 Furthermore, where there is potential for good, there is also potential for evil. "Evil into the mind of God or Man / May come and go," Adam insists, and the narrator con- firms that chaos supplies the material for the cre- ation of hell, "by curse / Created evil" (5.117-18, 2.622-23). Without the indeterminacy, the potential for otherness, that chaos constitutes, Satan could not tempt humankind or even conceive of success. Indeed, the psychological correlative of the poten- tial for otherness that underlies created order is freedom of will, the foundation of Milton's ethical beliefs at least since the composition of Areopagit- ica (Danielson 49). Milton's allegorical personification of chaos sig- nifies an absence of God that is always already present-the vital, feminine core of his omnip- otence. If he cannot live with her, except in the 1043 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos shadowy allegorical guise of the stuttering anarch with a crumbling face, he also cannot live without her. In certain respects, then, Chaos is to God as Eve is to Adam. If God has no separate female other external to him, he nevertheless acquiesces in his own feminine otherness-a kind of gender- specific negative identity-and can only exercise sovereignty and creative power by virtue of her.17 For the poesis of divine creation to occur, the cre- ator must fundamentally be, as Keats writes, "the most unpoetical of anything in existence, because he has no identity: he is continually in for, and fill- ing, some other body" (Milnes 134). How else could Milton's materialist, monist deity make distinct creatures, volitionally independent of him, who are nevertheless continually and utterly dependent on him for the substance and sustenance of their be- ing? For Milton nothing can exist without indeter- minacy, certainly not a sovereign deity who creates beings with free will. Milton's epic, if anything, goes farther than his theology in requiring a good first matter for the constitution of the cosmos and indeed in presupposing a hermaphroditic deity.18 Notes II write "Chaos" when referring to the character and "chaos" when referring to the place or condition. 2Milton scholarship conforms to this dualistic theological tendency. In Mephistopheles and the Androgyne Eliade dis- cusses the ironic cultural functions of chaos (78-122). 3On postmodernism and chaos see Hayles, Chaos Bound, and the essays collected in Hayles, Chaos and Order. For an illustra- tive range of postmodern theoretical approaches to culture, see Foster. The ramifications of chaos science have achieved such wide cultural currency that scientists no longer find chaos a use- ful term: it is "marked by scientific denotations as well as his- torical and mythical interpretations; it serves as a crossroads, a juncture where various strata and trends within the culture come together" (Hayles, Introduction 2). The concept of chaos has it- self become a chaotic postmodern phenomenon, eschewed by the scientifically rigorous for the otherness that it comprises. Hayles describes the mutually sustaining dynamics between the branches of chaos science and divergent other postmodern cul- tural sites, including deconstruction, new historicism, feminism, and information theory (Chaos Bound; Introduction). Lacan's definition of the unconscious as "the Other that even my lie in- vokes as a guarantor of the truth in which it subsists" reflects the ironic indeterminacy attendant on the self-other complex within ego psychology. Existentially, the other is "the locus from which the question of [the subject's own] existence may be presented to him" (Lacan 172, 194). On postmodern feminism as a discourse of otherness, see Irigaray; Owens. On ethics and ironic indeter- minacy in narrative, see Handwerk. The essays collected in Con- way and Seery address the compatibility of postmodern irony and political commitment, a question Rorty also deals with. 4Though concerned to distinguish Augustine from the Pla- tonic influences on him, Clark admits that "Augustine's concep- tion of human nature was haunted by Platonic dualism" (56). See also Armstrong, who considers the spectrum of dualisms within the Platonic tradition, tracing them from pre-Platonic Pythagoreanism, in which "the light, male, limiting, ordering principle is qualified as 'good' and the dark, female, indefinite principle as 'evil'" (34). 5Brown surveys early Christian attitudes toward the body, its meanings, and its place in society. Anticarnal bias notwith- standing, Augustinian doctrine in its time was a moderation of the dualistic tenets of the thriving ascetic cults. The writings of early Christian ascetics are often concerned with men's behav- ior toward women and with government of the appetites women arouse. On the evolving cosmological justifications in Renaissance political philosophy for the disciplinary power of the sovereign over his subjects, see Collins. One constant in these justifications is the premise that chaos inevitably returns when, as Richard Hooker writes, "a multitude of equals dealeth" (Collins 95); hence the necessity for a sovereign head to keep the body politic in hierarchical order, just as God maintains order among the four elements, of which matter is the basest. 6Blind Milton, visited nightly by his muse and inspired in darkness, departed significantly from Spenser's frequently ex- pressed antipathy to darkness and night. 7Homer's verb for battle and lovemaking is mignumi (Iliad 9.275, 15.510). 8Modern literary theorists have used chaos theory to expose the ideological basis of traditional ideas of order (Hayles, Chaos Bound 22-23). 9As Ricoeur notes, the evolution of a kingship order, with its supporting castes of priests and elite warriors, influenced the depiction of evil in Mesopotamian mythology. Feminist critics further argue that the rough, revisionist treatment of maternal deities, such as Tiamat, in this mythology reflects the victors' at- titudes in "phallocratic wars" that established patriarchy in the ancient Near East and overthrew the cult of the goddess (Keller 69-78; Daly 355). Evidence suggests that at least part of the Per- seus myth (the rescue of Andromeda from a sea monster) de- rives from the story of Marduk's battle with Tiamat (Keller 71). Schwartz's comparison of Marduk to Milton's Son overlooks Ricoeur's observation that "the creative act which distinguishes, separates, measures, and puts in order is inseparable from the criminal act that puts an end to the life of the oldest gods" (180). Schwartz also ignores Tiamat's divinity and gender, describing the deity instead as the "chaos monster" and the "fierce mon- ster" (28, 31), even though Tiamat is "mother of them all" in the Enuma elish-including the younger gods who rise up against her (62-64). The Hebrew word for tiamat is the grammatically 1044 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions John Rumrich feminine tehom, which English translations of Genesis render as "the deep." l?In contrast to other Milton scholars who have written on chaos, Adams comments on the relevance of this passage (74), as does Fallon (191). lA premise of contemporary chaos science is that without exact knowledge of initial conditions (impossible to achieve, given the uncertainty principle), outcomes cannot be predicted (Hayles, Introduction 11). While not refuting determinism, this argument means that no one will ever be able to confirm that the universe is deterministic (Dupr6 186). 12Adam's dilemma over the reliability of appearance is simi- lar to the problem posed by Swift's mad narrator in A Tale of a Tub: either remain a fool deluded by the deceptive beauty and intoxicating touch of nature's charming superficies or rip through the misleading show with reason (145). '3According to Girardot, the association of chaos with "an embryonic condition or womblike form" allows for an advanta- geous conception of the primal condition (214). The generative cast of Milton's descriptions of creation has long been recog- nized. As Drabble writes, Milton "sees the world as a living being, conceived, gestated, born, passing through unadorned childhood to the springing tender grass of puberty" (129). 14If the gender of chaos seems problematic, so too is the gen- der of light, which is identified with God as the "bright efflu- ence of bright essence increate" (3.6). "God is Light," yet the light emitted by the sun, despite having masculine-sounding abilities to "pierce" and "plant," is represented as female in Raphael's report of its presolar existence: "shee in a cloudie Tabernacle / Sojourd the while" (3.3, 7.248-49; my italics). In Christian Doctrine Milton insists that though "we cannot imag- ine light without some source of light, . . . we do not therefore think that a source of light is the same thing as light, or equal in excellence" (312). The radiant light informing the masculine sun may thus not be essentially a masculine force. Although lodged in a masculine orb, light's creative energy may be con- sidered feminine and more excellent than the body from which it shines. The evidence concerning the relation of light to the paternal deity in Milton's epic does not yield conclusions, but it is clear at least that Milton's God is essentially affiliated with feminine as well as masculine creative power. 15Although Saurat recognizes that preexistent matter is "part of the substance of God" in Milton's poetry and theology, he does not link this matter and chaos: "Since in [Milton's] philos- ophy everything comes from God by his 'retraction,' which produced first that divine matter from which the universe is evolved naturally, it is difficult to explain the anterior existence of chaos" (235-36). Chaos cannot be the first matter in Saurat's view because matter is part of God before creation. The unspo- ken assumption is that chaos cannot be identified with God. Saurat thus ignores repeated descriptions of chaos as a womb and concentrates instead on the singular and tentative character- ization of it as a "grave" (2.911), which he glosses with an ac- count from the Zohar: "God, before creating this world, had created several others and, not being pleased with them, had de- stroyed them.... It seems evident that, in Milton's mind, un- less the Earth fulfil the aims for which God created it, it will be destroyed also and become part of this chaos of lost worlds" (236). The Zohar may partly "explain" Milton's chaos as a grave for botched worlds that preceded the present one, but Saurat fails to see chaos as a primordial womb. Empson follows Saurat's analysis to its proper conclusion and recognizes in chaos the first matter of Milton's theology. In turn, however, Empson rejects the identification of God and the first matter in Paradise Lost so as to preserve the logic of Mil- ton's narrative. 16In Reesing's theological analysis Milton's heretical position that God possesses the attribute of potentiality is inconsistent with Milton's insistence on God's immutability and hence with the poet's fundamental assent to the Aristotelian definition of God as actus purus (Reesing 171-72). This inconsistency can seem less troublesome, however, if what God creates out of his infinite material potency becomes essentially distinct from him. Since God always contains infinite material potency, he may be said to remain immutable even when part of his potency be- comes actualized and distinct from him. Drawing on Aristotle's Metaphysics, I elsewhere assess the relation of material potency to God's essence and discuss in more detail Milton scholars' ar- guments on the subject (53-69). That God's material potency can be actualized in the form of "black tartareous cold infernal dregs / Adverse to life" does not mean that evil is latent in chaos, any more than evil is latent in the deity who establishes hell as A Universe of death ... by curse Created evil, for evil onely good, Where all life dies, death lives, and Nature breeds, Perverse, all monstrous, all prodigious things.... (2.622-25) Like Dante, Milton describes hell as a work of divine justice; and if justice is good, God's material potency must include the possibility of matter with which to create such a place as hell. '7Early biblical commentaries observe that before the birth of Eve, Adam was both male and female and that humanity is thus originally established in the image of a hermaphroditic God (Eliade and O'Flaherty). The hermaphrodite is an important image of the divine in various religious traditions (Campbell 103-08). In the seventeenth century Jakob Boehme is notable for stressing the creator's hermaphroditic totality of being and Adam's original reflection of and fall from it (Erb 276). 18In 1991 Brian Opie, of Victoria University, Wellington, New Zealand, discussed the ideas behind this essay with me and brought Barthelme's story "On Angels" to my attention. I am much obliged to him and to Stephen Dobranski, of the Uni- versity of Texas, Austin, who read early drafts of this essay and offered useful advice for its revision. Works Cited Adams, Robert M. "A Little Look into Chaos." Illustrious Evi- dence: Approaches to English Literature of the Early Seven- teenth Century. Ed. Earl Miner. Berkeley: U of California P, 1975. 71-89. 1045 This content downloaded from 128.250.144.144 on Tue, 16 Jul 2013 10:23:14 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Milton's God and the Matter of Chaos Andrewes, John. The Brazen Serpent. London, 1621. Armstrong, A. H. 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Lorenzoni, Leiserowitz Et Al - Cross-National Comparisons of Image Assocations With Global Warming and Climate Change Among Laypeople in The US and Britain