Abstract
Salwa Khoddam, Horace Jeffery Hodges: The Peach in Milton’s
Paradise Lost, Marvell’s “Garden,” and Eliot’s “Prufrock”:
Etymology, Sin, and Transgression Medieval and Early Modern
English Studies Volume 24 No. 1 (2016) 115-150
The article investigates the peach as symbol of the forbidden
fruit in Milton’s Paradise Lost, Marvell’s “Garden,” and Eliot’s
“Prufrock.” Milton focuses on the fruit’s appearance as “downy,”
Marvell refers to the peach as “curious,” and Eliot worries that
to “dare” to eat a peach could disturb the universe. Milton’s
choice of “downy” fits the peach better than what we would now
call an apple. Marvell’s choice of “curious” fits the Christian
world’s long-held belief that curiosity was the vice that led Eve
to try the forbidden fruit. Eliot’s choice of “dare” fits Eve’s
having “dar’d” to eat the forbidden fruit in Paradise Lost, for
daring to eat the fruit can disturb the universe, as, for example,
Eve’s eating did. These three points are supported by context,
analysis, explication, connections, etymology, and more. Noted in
passing are a few brief references in art and literature to the
peach as the forbidden fruit, and these are treated merely to show
that such identification is not unheard of. More important are the
connections drawn between the fruit in the three poems, for such
connections are the focus of this paper.
Keywords
John Milton, Andrew Marvell, T. S. Eliot, forbidden fruit, peach,
etymology, curiosity