Imperfect Sense: The Predicament of Milton's Irony. By Victoria Silver. Princeton
and Oxford: Princeton Univ. Press, 2001. Pp. xiv + 409. $49.50.
Until now, the fullest statement of Milton's relation to the theology of the continental
reformers, especially Luther, has been Georgia Christopher's Milton and
the Science of the Saints (1982). Victoria Silver's Imperfect Sense: The Predicament of
Milton's Irony engages many of the same aspects of Lutheran theology-especially
Luther's notion that believers wrestle with revelation to "make" the deity (facere
Deum), "not in the substance of God" but in relation to themselves. Both Christopher
and Silver call upon Luther to illuminate the presence in Paradise Lost of what
Christopher called an "evangelical irony" whereby the poet uses literary methods
to deepen readers' relationship to the divine Word. Christopher argued that the
Word's meanings-initially bare and doctrinal in Book 3-unfold as a revelation
of divine love in the world of the poem through the various interpretations of
God's speech (by Satan, steadfast angels, blind poet, Adam and Eve, creation,
and history). Silver agrees that religious knowledge "behaves like a practice or a
stance instead of a doctrine" (p. 50).
Joan S. Bennett
University of Delaware |
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