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Encyclopedia > Samson Agonistes
An Etching of Samson, from an 1882 German Bible
An Etching of Samson, from an 1882 German Bible


Samson Agonistes (Greek: "Samson the agonist") is a work of blank verse tragedy by John Milton. It first appeared in 1671 when printed into a single volume with Milton's Paradise Regain'd. Scholastic arguments for the date of authorship are similar to those of Paradise Regained, but it is generally agreed that it was begun around the same time and completed after the larger work, possibly very close to the date of publishing.


A retelling of the story of Samson in Judges 13-16, it bears many similarities to Milton's other works, especially Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained. Like these works, Samson Agonistes follows many conventions of the Greek Classics, specifically attention to verisimilitude, a chorus, a sympathetic hero, and small cast of players. It also bears many correlations to Milton's life and gives the modern scholar insight to Milton's attitudes about his life and his religion.


Samson Agonistes is the conversation of a man in captivity due to his own foolishness and forced to labor in pain. The heavy labor and embarrassment of pushing a grain mill, a task often given to oxen or donkeys, is added to the pain from the scars of savage beatings and blindness after the Philistines gouged out his eyes. "Blind among enemies, O worse then chains. (66)"


This physical pain is coupled with the mental anguish (that is, the Greek definition of agony) brought on by knowledge that his current low estate is a direct result of broken vow to God (his secret revelation of the source of his God-given strength) and subsequent betrayal by Delilah, the woman he loved.


Milton even dramatizes a conversation between Delilah and Samson. In this passage, Milton tries to paint Delilah a more innocent person, a woman who foolishly betrayed a man and then regrets it. This foolishness is attributed to her inability to overcome emotion as a resultant of her status as the weaker sex, a theme mirrored in discussion of Eve in Paradise Lost.


As blindness overtook Milton, it becomes a major thematic point in Samson Agonistes, and is seen also in Paradise Lost (3.22-55) and his 16th Sonnet. Many scholars have rhumatized over the themation of Milton's increasing blindness in his works. This recurrence of blindness came after Milton temporarily gave up his poetry to work for Oliver Cromwell and the Commonwealth government. He continued this service even though his eyesight was failing and he knew that he was hastening his own blindness. The correlation is significant to Agonistes plot: Milton describes Samson as being "Eyeless in Gaza", a phrase that has become Agonistes most quoted line. Novelist Aldous Huxley used it has the title for his 1936 novel Eyeless in Gaza.


The inevitability of circumstance, or rather, the sympathy through perceived innocence of the protagonist and those around him, are characteristic of Milton in all of his Biblically based works, and, subsequently, very characteristic of Milton's persona as the modern scholastic understands him.


The Persons (Cast)

  • Samson
  • Manoa the Father of Samson
  • Dalila his Wife (It should be noted that she is never noted as his wife in any Biblical text.)
  • Harapha of Gath
  • Publick Officer
  • Messenger
  • Chorus of Danites

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Elements of the Epic Hero (1104 words)
In his 2002 essay “Text and Context for Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes,” author Steven Dobranski examines the Omissa, an additional ten lines which were printed as an addition to the published copy of Samson Agonistes.
Readers may never know what made Samson love Dalila, but through an understanding of epic heroes and their stories, they may better understand who Samson is and what he does in Samson Agonistes.
SAMSON AND THE OMISSA, By: Dobranski, Stephen B., Studies in English Literature (Rice), 00393657, Winter 96, Vol.
Samson (oratorio) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (149 words)
Samson is an oratorio by George Frideric Handel.
It was based on a libretto by Newburgh Hamilton, who based it on Milton's Samson Agonistes, which in turn was based on the figure Samson in Chapter 16 of the Book of Judges.
Samson is usually performed as an oratorio in concert form, but on occasions has also been staged as an opera.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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