Eikonoklastes

Title page of Eikonoklastes.

Eikonoklastes (from the Greek εἰκονοκλάστης, "iconoclast") is a book by John Milton, published October 1649. In it he provides a justification for the execution of Charles I, which had taken place on 30 January 1649. The book's title is taken from the Greek, and means "Iconoclast" or "breaker of the icon", and refers to Eikon Basilike, a Royalist propaganda work. The translation of Eikon Basilike is "icon of the King"; it was published immediately after the execution. Milton's book is therefore usually seen as Parliamentarian propaganda, explicitly designed to counter the Royalist arguments.

Background

Milton was commissioned to write Eikonoklastes as a response to Charles I's supposed Eikon Basilike (1649). The tract was intended to be the official argument by the Commonwealth government.

Eikon Basilike was published just after Charles I's execution, and the work portrayed him as a martyr. The piece was written with straightforward political aims, to stir up popular sentiment in support of the former monarch and to undermine the control of the Commonwealth government. The work proved so popular that there were 35 editions produced that year. Milton's approach was different from that of Eikon Basilike, which may have in fact been a composite work with John Gauden involved in ghostwriting: instead of appealing to popular sentiment, Milton's work was closely argued and tried to meet each of the points in the Eikon.[1][2]

Milton believed, certainly, that the Eikon Basilike created a false idol and he wanted to destroy it with truth.[3] Eikonoklastes, titled Eikonolastes in Answer to a Book Intitl'd Eikon Basilike, The Portrature of his Sacred Majesty in his Solitudes and Sufferings, was issued in two versions in October 1649, in English, and was enlarged in 1650. It was quite soon translated into Latin and French. In 1651 a reply appeared, Eikon Aklastos ("the icon unbroken").[4] It was written by Joseph Jane, involved in royalist organisation.[5][6]

Tract

Milton begins his work by mentioning that he was commissioned to write Eikonoklastes and that he did such for the good of the Commonwealth:[7] "I take it on me as a work assign'd rather, then by me cho'n or affected"[8] The central argument of Eikonoklastes involves the tyranny inherent in all monarchies, and Milton attacks the idea put forth by Charles I that the liberty of individuals consists[9] "in the enjoyment of the fruits of our industry, and the benefit of those Laws to which we our selves have consented".[10] Milton's response is to point out how such a definition cannot actually separate different kinds of governments:[9]

First, for in the injoyment of those fruits, which our industry and labours have made our own upon our own, what Privilege is that, above what the 'Turks, Jewes, and Mores enjoy under the Turkish Monarchy? For without that kind of Justice, which is also in Argiers, among Theevs and Pirates between themselves, no kind of Government, no Societie, just or unjust could stand; no combination or conspiracy could stick together. We expect therfore something more, that must distinguish free Government from slavish[10]

To Milton, Charles I was able to coerce the English people and actually made them his slaves, especially through his veto power which established him[9] "as the transcendent and ultimat Law above all our Laws; and to rule us forcibly by Laws to which we ourselves did not consent".[11]

Milton attacks Charles I's rhetorical flourishes throughout Eikon Basilike, and he claims that[12] "the whole Book might perhaps be intended a peece of Poetrie".[13] Milton criticises every aspect of Eikon Basilike to the point that when Charles I claims that he was with gentlemen, Milton responds[12] "Gentlemen indeed; the ragged Infantrie of Stewes and Brothels".[14] However, the criticism was not limited to just style and images. In response that Charles I coining the term "demagogue", Milton claimed that the word as an attack on the English language and the English people and says,[15] "the affrightment of this Goblin word; for the King by his leave cannot coine English as he could Money, to be current".[16]

In the second edition, Milton expanded his claim that the supporters of Charles I were[17] an "inconstant, irrational, and Image-doting rabble" to declare:

that like a credulous and hapless herd, begott'n to servility, and inchanted with these popular institutes of Tyranny, subscrib'd with a new device of the Kings Picture at his praiers, hold out both thir eares with such delight and ravishment to be stigmatiz'd and board through in witness of thir own voluntary and beloved baseness.[18]

Milton also altered an epigraph by Sallust on the title page that comes from Gaius Memmius's speech in Bellum Iugurthinum. The speech penned by Sallust for Memmius describes various abuses, and is used to argue that all monarchs are corrupt.[19] In addition to a discussion of Charles I and monarchy, Milton added response to Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon, who wrote The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars.[20]

Themes

Milton argues that there is a potential in all monarchical governments for the potential of enslaving a population, which was an argument he previously relied on in his The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates. Milton's view of freedom was not limited to just having the right to property, but to be free from the potential of arbitrary domination by a monarch.[9] Monarchy was not the only subject of importance to Milton within Eikonoklastes; Milton also defended Calvinistic principles, and he claims that reformation cannot accept episcopal or monarchical control. Instead, a presbyterian based religion was the only proper type of religion.[21] To John Shawcross, Milton's experience while writing the piece, along with the two Defences "supplied the experience with the world, that dark world and wide, that seems to have been needed for Milton to move beyond the defiant to degrees of understanding, if not acceptance, of humankind."[22]

Starting in 1649, Milton began to connect his various prose publications with the plan of a future epic to be composed, and Eikonoklastes was one such work.[23] As such, there are multiple parallels between the actions of Charles I monarchy and Satan's rule in hell found within Paradise Lost. The description of a rise of an antichristian monarchs near the end of Eikonoklastes declares that such individuals rely on an ambiguous language to gain power. Likewise, Milton's Satan relies on the same kind of rhetoric. Likewise, the deviant followers of Charles I are connected to demons in hell who drink and blaspheme.[24]

Critical review

The work failed: it is the general view that Milton's work did not succeed, at least in terms of rebutting the Eikon Basilike. On the other hand, scholars still debate exactly what the polemic intention of Milton's work was. This book was the first work by Milton to be at all widely read.[25] Public sentiment still supported Charles I,[3] but the tract was able to appeal to a larger audience than many of Milton's previous works.[26]

After the English Restoration of 1660, Milton's readers primarily were vindictive, and Eikonoklastes had justified regicides.[27] The Act of Oblivion was enacted on 29 August 1660, and Milton was not among those who were listed to suffer the death penalty for their part in Charles I's execution. On the other hand, a proclamation by the king demanded that Eikonoklastes and Defensio pro Populo Anglicano be burned. The works were soon after burned in public by the public hangman.[28] This did not stop the work attracting readers, and there was a new edition in 1690 after the Glorious Revolution.[29]

Notes

  1. Dobranski 1999 p. 15
  2. Holly Faith Nelson, Jim Daems, Eikon Basilike: The Portraiture of His Sacred Majesty in His Solitudes and Sufferings: with Selections from Eikonoklastes. 2006. pp. 19–20.
  3. 1 2 Raymond 2003 p. 206
  4. Zwicker 1993 p. 37
  5. Peacey 2004 p. 107
  6.  "Jane, Joseph". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  7. Corns 1999 p. 94
  8. Milton 1962 p. 339
  9. 1 2 3 4 Dzelzainis 2003 p. 307
  10. 1 2 Milton 1962 p. 574
  11. Milton 1962 p. 575
  12. 1 2 Corns 1999 p. 95
  13. Milton 1962 p. 406
  14. Milton 1962 p. 380
  15. Corns 1999 p. 88
  16. Milton 1962 pp. 392–393
  17. Raymond 2003 p. 207
  18. Milton 1962 p. 601
  19. Dzelzainis 2003 pp. 307–308
  20. Shawcross 1993 p.273
  21. McDill 1942 pp. 267–268
  22. Shawcross 1993 p. 240
  23. Shawcross 1993 p. 213
  24. Loewenstein 2003 pp. 350–351
  25. Danielson 1999 p. 239
  26. Von Maltzahn 1999 p. 239
  27. Von Maltzahn 1999 p. 241
  28. Pfister 2002 p. 54
  29. Shawcross 1993 p. 278

References

External links

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