Smiling At Rebellion

To someone who has never read Paradise Lost, Satan indeed comes across as the "romantic hero" of the story. Milton gives him a personality that is not what someone would normally think about. He also makes God, to some degree, seem like a type of supreme dictator. One would think that a just God would take rebellion as a very serious matter. However, in lines 710-718 of Book V give an image of God smiling at the prospect of the rebellion.

The first time I read those lines, I thought one word: WHY? Why would God smile at a direct challenge to his authority? The answer is that he smiled because He knows he can utterly crush the rebellion. His power is beyond compare or question. He smiles at the Son because he knows the end result before it happens. Many readers would say this is arrogance of the highest order but then again, He is God after all.

My only real question is why would Milton choose this specific wording. In a sense, it seem as if Milton's God thinks of the rebellion as a sort of joke.

I will be commenting on Faith and Ethan's posts.

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