These
passages from Book III make up part of Milton’s second and longest invocation,
which is also his most autobiographical and symbolic. Milton refers to light
simultaneously as divine wisdom and literal light. When he speaks about his
blindness he refers to both his inward blindness, or lack of divine wisdom, and
his literal blindness, or loss of eyesight. He begins by praising holy light as
the essence of God. The idea that God is light was common before and during
Milton’s time, and is a popular interpretation of certain biblical passages in
Genesis. He then invokes his heavenly muse, the Holy Spirit, by reusing similar
images and ideas from his first invocation; remember that Milton has asked for
this heaven muse to illuminate “what in me is dark” (I.22). Symbolically,
Milton asks for his muse to enter his body and fill him with divine knowledge. Milton
discusses his physical, outward blindness when he compares himself to other
famous blind “Prophets old” (III.36), such as Homer (Maimonides) and Tiresias,
and asks that he be filled with even more wisdom than them. He does not seek
pity for his blindness, explaining that he is still active and undeterred from
his poetic purpose. He believes that his outward blindness is insignificant,
and that he hopes he is not inwardly blind. He hopes to sing beautifully like
the darkling bird, which sings at night, unable to see who or what she is
singing to. He ends his invocation by asking for his inward blindness to be
corrected so that he can properly tell the story of Adam and Eve.
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