I acknowledge that William Cowper never rises to the first rank of poets but his Poems (1931) in the Everyman’s Library edition – complete and yet modestly sized in 428 pages – rests on the shelf closest to my desk, between volumes by Edwin Arlington Robinson and Walter de la Mare. I read him often. His complicated personality – intermittently mad and suicidal, yet devout and always amusing with friends, a lover of hares and other animals – makes him a character worthy of a novel by Jane Austen, who was among his devoted admirers. Here is Cowper on May 3, 1780, writing to his friend the Rev. John Newton and making piety playful:
“I delight in baubles, and know them to be so; for rested in, and viewed without a reference to their author, what is the Earth, what are the planets, what is the sun itself, but a bauble? Better for a man never to have seen them, or to see them with the eyes of a brute, stupid and unconscious of what he beholds, than not to be able to say, ‘The Maker of all these wonders is my friend!’ Their eyes have never been opened, to see that they are trifles; mine have been, and will be till they are closed for ever.”
Cowper’s metaphors often mingle
playfulness and precision. A bauble is a plaything, a toy or trinket. Cowper
finds in them an endorsement of his faith. Clearly, he is writing in the manic
phase of his madness. On other occasions, guilt overwhelms him and God becomes a
scourge. In the same letter he exults:
“I draw mountains,
valleys, woods, and streams, and ducks, and dab-chicks [“grebes” in the U.S.].
I admire them myself, and Mrs. Unwin admires them, and her praise and my praise
put together are fame enough for me. Oh! I could spend whole days and moonlight
nights in feeding upon a lovely prospect! My eyes drink the rivers as they
flow. If every human being upon earth could think for one quarter of an hour as
I have done for many years, there might, perhaps, be many miserable men among
them, but not an unawakened one would be found from the arctic to the antarctic
circle.”
And yet, the same man in his poem “Lines Written During a Period of Insanity” can write: “I, fed with judgment, in a fleshy tomb am /
Buried above ground.” Here is Cowper writing to another friend, the Rev. Robert
Unwin, on Jan. 17, 1782:
“To make verse speak the
language of prose, without being prosaic, to marshal the words of it in such an
order as they might naturally take in falling from the lips of an extemporary
speaker, yet without meanness, harmoniously, and without seeming to displace a
single syllable for the sake of rhyme, is one of the most arduous tasks a poet
can undertake.”
In a letter to Unwin,
always his stalwart friend, written on April Fool’s Day in 1782, shortly after
publishing his first volume of verse, Cowper thanks him for publicizing the collection:
“I could not have found a better trumpeter.” When not insane, Cowper was the
wittiest and most gracious of men. He never says “thank you” when a more
baroque expression of gratitude is handy. Two sentences later, and extending
the musical metaphor, Cowper writes:
“Methinks I see you with the long tube at your mouth, proclaiming to your numerous connections my poetical merits and at proper intervals levelling it at Olney, and pouring into my ear the welcome sound of their approbation. I need not encourage you to proceed, your breath will never fail in such a cause; and thus encouraged, I myself perhaps may proceed also, and when the versifying fit returns produce another volume.”
