The English poet William Cowper (1731-1800) suffered his first attack of mental illness – today we would likely call it profound depression – at age thirty-two. Before then, while studying law in the Temple, Cowper dined every Thursday with friends at the Nonsense Club. He and a fellow clerk, Edward Thurlow – the future Lord Chancellor – spent their time “constantly employed from morning to night in giggling and making giggle,” he wrote in a letter to his cousin Lady Hesketh. He published a series of light, occasionally whimsical essays, and then in 1763, made his first suicide attempt and was confined to St. Alban’s madhouse. He suffered three additional such attacks. In “Lines Written During a Period of Insanity,” Cowper would write: “I, fed with judgment, in a fleshy tomb am / Buried above ground.”
An old friend has been
diagnosed with depression and was recently hospitalized following a suicide
attempt. I’m not naïve but I was surprised. He’s a reliably funny guy, smart, thoughtful
and talented. His illness appeared in middle age and is not associated with
drugs, alcohol or some life trauma. By his account, it came on quickly and powerfully,
like an ambush.
Cowper tended to blame himself
for his illness, treating it moralistically as a judgment from God. My friend
has the advantage of pharmaceutical treatment for his condition, therapy and
support from family and friends. Poor Cowper had little of that. Consider these
lines from “An Epistle to Robert Lloyd, Esq.”
“But to divert a fierce
banditti
(Sworn foes to ev’ry thing
that’s witty),
That, with a black
infernal train,
Make cruel inroads in my
brain,
And daily threaten to
drive thence
My little garrison of
sense:
The fierce banditti, which
I mean,
Are gloomy thoughts led on by Spleen.”
No comments:
Post a Comment