Of man's first disobedience, and the fruit of that forbidden tree," John Basinger said aloud to himself, as he walked on a treadmill. "Of man's first disobedience…" In 1992, at the age of 58, Basinger decided to memorize Paradise Lost, John Milton's epic poem, as a form of mental activity while he was working out at the gym. An actor, he'd memorized shorter poems before, and he wanted to see how much of the epic he could remember. "As I finished each book," he wrote, "I began to perform it and keep it alive in repertory while committing the next to memory."
The twelve books of Paradise Lost contain over 60,000 words; it took Basinger about 3,000 hours to learn them by rote. He did so by reciting the piece, line-by-line out loud, for about an hour a day for nine years. When he memorized all 12 books, in 2001, Basinger performed the masterpiece in a live recital that lasted three days. Since then, he's performed smaller sections for various audiences, eventually attracting the attention of John Seamon, a psychologist at Wesleyan University, in Connecticut. In 2008, "He recited for an hour in the Wesleyan library," says Seamon. "He'd given out…
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