Book Description
Annotation A scholarly edition of letters and prose writings by William Cowper. The edition presents an authoritative text, together with an introduction, commentary notes, and scholarly apparatus.
Author : William Cowper
Publisher : Oxford : Clarendon Press
Page : 280 pages
File Size : 23,24 MB
Release : 1979
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN :
Annotation A scholarly edition of letters and prose writings by William Cowper. The edition presents an authoritative text, together with an introduction, commentary notes, and scholarly apparatus.
Author : William Cowper
Publisher :
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 36,57 MB
Release : 1810
Category : English poetry
ISBN :
Author : William Cowper
Publisher :
Page : 386 pages
File Size : 42,43 MB
Release : 1817
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Robert Benton Seeley
Publisher :
Page : 322 pages
File Size : 25,9 MB
Release : 1855
Category :
ISBN :
Author : William Hayley
Publisher :
Page : 448 pages
File Size : 11,7 MB
Release : 1803
Category :
ISBN :
Author : James King
Publisher : Durham : Duke University Press
Page : 368 pages
File Size : 47,21 MB
Release : 1986
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN :
Studie over leven en werk van de Engelse dichter (1731-1800)
Author : John Newton
Publisher :
Page : 424 pages
File Size : 28,36 MB
Release : 1869
Category :
ISBN :
Author : William Cowper
Publisher :
Page : 468 pages
File Size : 27,35 MB
Release : 1828
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Thomas Wright
Publisher :
Page : 744 pages
File Size : 47,74 MB
Release : 1892
Category :
ISBN :
Author : David Cecil
Publisher : Faber & Faber
Page : 316 pages
File Size : 13,67 MB
Release : 2009-05
Category :
ISBN : 9780571251643
First published in 1929, The Stricken Deer was the winner of that year's James Tait Black Memorial Prize and also the Hawthornden Prize: it was David Cecil's first book. For a time, towards the end of the eighteenth-century, William Cowper was the foremost poet in England. But David Cecil's biography doesn't celebrate a life of success, rather, in Cowper's own words, 'the strange and uncommon incidents of my life.' Cowper suffered from severe bouts of depression. His personal tragedy however enriched English literature: the fear of madness made him turn to writing poetry as a form of mental discipline, and isolation for the great world and from his own kind helped him to become the most enchanting of letter-writers. 'This is a sympathetic and vivid biography; it is subtle with a kind of gentle acuteness and vivid without literary ostentation. It is the work of a biographer with a clear head and a clever heart ... the rarest of all merits is the sensitive fairness of the of the biographer's estimate of character and situation throughout.' Desmond MacCarthy, "Sunday Times"