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Biography of Abraham Cowley
Name: Abraham Cowley
Birth Date: 1618
Death Date: 1667
Place of Birth: London, England
Nationality: English
Gender: Male
Occupations: poet, writer
Abraham Cowley
The English writer Abraham Cowley (1618-1667) was among the first to use the Pindaric ode form in English poetry. He contributed importantly to the development of the familiar essay in English.The posthumous son of a merchant, Abraham Cowley was born in London and educated at Westminster and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he became a fellow in 1640. Like Richard Crashaw, he left Cambridge in 1643, when Oliver Cromwell's occupation of the city threatened the continuance of his fellowship, and joined the court at Oxford. He served the English court in Paris in 1646 and spent the next years on royal business. Returning to England in 1654, he was arrested the following year but after his release made his peace with Cromwell. He returned to Oxford to study medicine and earned a doctor of medicine degree in 1657.With the Restoration in 1660 Cowley regained his fellowship together with some land whose rent provided a livelihood somewhat
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the next century. More verses appeared in 1663, and in 1668 his posthumous Works made additional poetry and his essays available.The lyrics of The Mistress were influenced by metaphysical and cavalier traditions. They lack the virtues of the poetry they imitate, however, and thus served Dr. Johnson well in the next century when he chose them to illustrate the shortcomings of the metaphysical school. Cowley's religious epic, however, is the work of a man of common sense and rationality. Further Reading The famous life of Cowley in Samuel Johnson's Lives of the English Poets appeared in 1779. A modern biography is Arthur H. Nethercot, Abraham Cowley, the Muse's Hannibal (1931). Studies of his poetry and its background are in George Williamson, The Donne Tradition (1930), and Douglas Bush, English Literature in the Earlier Seventeenth Century (1945; 2d ed. 1962).Cowley, Abraham, Selected poems, Manchester England: Carcanet Press, 1994.Perkin, Michael Roger, Abraham Cowley: a bibliography, Folkestone: Dawson, 1977.
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