'Paradise Lost' is an epic poem by John Milton. It follows same story line of fall of Adam and Eve. But in his work Milton has given logic and arguments. In Bible, Eve's character speaks nothing but in Paradise Lost she argues logically. Character of Satan also is added. He has his own motives. As revenge to God he decides to vanish God's best creation, Men. So he transfers into snake and tempts Eve for her beauty. Eve eats fruit of knowledge. Adam also eats apple because he didn't want live without Eve. So here Milton has portrayed Adam as great lover. In the end Satan and his followers turn into snake and Adam and Eve leaves Eden garden.
A man's destination is his own village, His own fire, and his wife's cooking; To sit in front of his own door at sunset And see his grandson, and his neighbour's grandson Playing in the dust together. Scarred but secure, he has many memories Which return at the hour of conversation, (The warm or the cool hour, according to the climate) Of foreign men, who fought in foreign places, Foreign to each other. A man's destination is not his destiny, Every country is home to one man And exile to another. Where a man dies bravely At one with his destiny, that soil is his. Let his village remember. This was not your land, or ours: but a village in the Midlands, And one in the Five Rivers, may have the same graveyard. Let those who go home tell the same story of you: Of action with a common purpose, action None the less fruitful if neither you nor we Know, unt...
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