William Cowper's poetry was an important
part of the emerging discourse of British nature writing. He is a
key transitional figure, whose conventional piety--"God made the country,
and man made the town" (The Task, I, l. 749)--is frequently offset
by an inability to draw consolation from the traditional view of a divinely
ordered universe, but who seeks instead some form of resolution from
within the natural world itself. He consistently contrasts the beauties
of solitary, rural, nature with the deceptive charms of the city:
What wonder then that health and virtue, giftsThe Task was perhaps the poem of Cowper's that had the most direct influence on Romantic poetic practice, particularly on Wordsworth. Cowper distinguishes his own verse writing explicitly from the niceties of Pope and the sophisticated urban school: "Thou knowest my praise of nature most sincere, / And that my raptures are not conjured up / To serve occasions of poetic pomp (I, 1785, ll. 150-52). He called his summer garden house in Olney, Buckinghamshire, a "verse manufactory," suggesting an important link between authorial solitude, a naturalized setting, and the writing of poetry. This garden shed became a site of literary pilgrimage not long after Cowper's death in 1800. He was plagued by depression (which he called "melancholia") throughout his adult life. His emotional struggles produced some of his most famous stanzas, in which he describes the fate of anyone who lives in "a World of Pains and troubles" (Keats 1819) as like that of a sailor drowned at sea: Obscurest night involved the sky, |
The Snail (University of Virginia, from Poems. 2 vols. London: W. H. Reid, 1820) |