The Collected Works. William Cowper

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The Collected Works - William Cowper


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friend and servant,

       W. C.

      Cowper's present retirement was distinguished by many private acts of beneficence, and his exemplary virtue was such that the opulent sometimes delighted to make him their almoner. In his sequestered life at Olney, he ministered abundantly to the wants of the poor, from a fund with which he was supplied by that model of extensive and unostentatious philanthropy, the late John Thornton, Esq., whose name he has immortalized in his Poem on Charity, still honouring his memory by an additional tribute to his virtues in the following descriptive eulogy, written immediately on his decease, in the year 1790.

      Poets attempt the noblest task they can,

       Praising the Author of all good in man;

       And next commemorating worthies lost,

       The dead, in whom that good abounded most.

      Thee therefore of commercial fame, but more

       Fam'd for thy probity, from shore to shore—

       Thee, Thornton, worthy in some page to shine

       As honest, and more eloquent than mine,

       I mourn; or, since thrice happy thou must be,

       The world, no longer thy abode, not thee;

       Thee to deplore were grief misspent indeed;

       It were to weep that goodness has its meed,

       That there is bliss prepared in yonder sky,

       And glory, for the virtuous when they die.

      What pleasure can the miser's fondled hoard

       Or spendthrift's prodigal excess afford,

       Sweet as the privilege of healing woe

       Suffer'd by virtue combating below!

       That privilege was thine; Heaven gave thee means

       To illumine with delight the saddest scenes,

       Till thy appearance chased the gloom, forlorn

       As midnight, and despairing of a morn.

       Thou hadst an industry in doing good,

       Restless as his who toils and sweats for food.

       Av'rice in thee was the desire of wealth

       By rust unperishable, or by stealth.

       And, if the genuine worth of gold depend

       On application to its noblest end,

       Thine had a value in the scales of heaven,

       Surpassing all that mine or mint have given:

       And though God made thee of a nature prone

       To distribution, boundless, of thy own;

       And still, by motives of religious force,

       Impell'd thee more to that heroic course;

       Yet was thy liberality discreet,

       Nice in its choice, and of a temp'rate heat;

       And, though in act unwearied, secret still,

       As, in some solitude, the summer rill

       Refreshes, where it winds, the faded green,

       And cheers the drooping flowers, unheard, unseen.

      Such was thy charity; no sudden start,

       After long sleep of passion in the heart,

       But stedfast principle, and in its kind

       Of close alliance with th' eternal mind;

       Traced easily to its true source above,

       To Him, whose works bespeak his nature, love.

       Thy bounties all were Christian, and I make

       This record of thee for the Gospel's sake;

       That the incredulous themselves may see

       Its use and power exemplified in thee.

      This simple and sublime eulogy was a just tribute of respect to the memory of this distinguished philanthropist; and, among the happiest actions of this truly liberal man, we may reckon his furnishing to a character so reserved and so retired as Cowper the means of enjoying the gratification of active and costly beneficence; a gratification in which the sequestered poet had delighted to indulge, before his acquaintance with Mr. Newton afforded him an opportunity of being concerned in distributing the private, yet extensive, bounty of an opulent and exemplary merchant.

      Cowper, before he quitted St. Alban's, assumed the charge of a necessitous child, to extricate him from the perils of being educated by very profligate parents; he sent him to a school at Huntingdon, transferred him, on his removal, to Olney, and finally settled him as an apprentice at Oundle, in Northamptonshire.

      The warm, benevolent, and cheerful piety of Mr. Newton, induced his friend Cowper to participate so abundantly in his parochial plans and engagements, that the poet's time and thoughts were more and more engrossed by devotional objects. He became a valuable auxiliary to a faithful parish priest, superintended the religious exercises of the poor, and engaged in an important undertaking, to which we shall shortly have occasion to advert.

      But in the midst of these pious duties he forgot not his distant friends, and particularly his amiable relation and correspondent, of the Park-house, near Hertford. The following letter to that lady has no date, but it was probably written soon after his establishment at Olney. The remarkable memento in the postscript was undoubtedly introduced to counteract an idle rumour, arising from the circumstance of his having settled himself under the roof of a female friend, whose age and whose virtues he considered to be sufficient securities to ensure her reputation as well as his own.

       Table of Contents

      My dear Cousin—I have not been behindhand in reproaching myself with neglect, but desire to take shame to myself for my unprofitableness in this, as well as in all other respects. I take the next immediate opportunity, however, of thanking you for yours, and of assuring you that, instead of being surprised at your silence, I rather wonder that you or any of my friends have any room left for so careless and negligent a correspondent in your memories. I am obliged to you for the intelligence you send me of my kindred, and rejoice to hear of their welfare. He who settles the bounds of our habitations has at length cast our lot at a great distance from each other, but I do not therefore forget their former kindness to me, or cease to be interested in their well being. You live in the centre of a world I know you do not delight in. Happy are you, my dear friend, in being able to discern the insufficiency of all it can afford to fill and satisfy the desires of an immortal soul. That God who created us for the enjoyment of himself, has determined in mercy that it shall fail us here, in order that the blessed result of our inquiries after happiness in the creature may be a warm pursuit and a close attachment to our true interests, in fellowship and communion with Him, through the name and mediation of a dear Redeemer. I bless his goodness and grace that I have any reason to hope I am a partaker with you in the desire after better things than are to be found in a world polluted with sin, and therefore devoted to destruction. May He enable us both to consider our present life in its only true light, as an opportunity put into our hands to glorify him amongst men by a conduct suited to his word and will. I am miserably defective in this holy and blessed art, but I hope there is at the bottom of all my sinful infirmities a sincere desire to live just so long as I may be enabled, in some poor measure, to answer the end of my existence in this respect, and then to obey the summons and attend him in a world where they who are his servants here shall pay him an unsinful obedience for ever. Your dear mother is too good to me, and puts a more charitable construction upon my silence than the fact will warrant. I am not better employed than I should be in corresponding with her. I have that within which hinders me wretchedly in every thing that I ought to do, and is prone to trifle, and let time and every good thing run to waste. I hope however to


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