![]() ![]() Hopeless to circumvent us joined, where each ![]() Watches, no doubt, with greedy hope to find What hath been warned us-what malicious foe,ĭespairing, seeks to work us woe and shameīy sly assault and somewhere nigh at hand Eve suggests that they split up, but Adam is concerned that Satan will have better success hurting them if they’re apart:īefall thee severed from me for thou know’st Upon waking, Adam and Eve wish to tend to God’s garden, to shape it and mold into a beauty respectful of God, but there’s so much to tend to. Adam and Eve were blissfully enjoying the Garden of Eden, unaware of Satan’s presence, although the Archangel Raphael has warned them about Satan. ![]() ![]() Previously, we left Satan as he turned into a serpent to find a way to hurt God through Adam and Eve. In this penultimate part of this series, we continue to extract wisdom from Milton’s interpretation of the Biblical story of Adam and Eve. How do we discern when something is truly beautiful or when beauty merely masks the detrimental? What would our lives be without beauty? Yet there’s always the chance that beauty adorns and accompanies harmful things. ![]()
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