[Cowper by Goldwin Smith]@TWC D-Link book
Cowper

CHAPTER VI
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His soul was stirred by no movement so mighty, if it were even capable of the impulse.

Tenderness he has, and pathos as well as playfulness; he has unfailing grace and ease; he has clearness like that of a trout-stream.

Fashions, even our fashions, change.

The more metaphysical poetry of our time has indeed too much in it, besides the metaphysics, to be in any danger of being ever laid on the shelf with the once admired conceits of Cowley; yet it may one day in part lose, while the easier and more limpid kind of poetry may in part regain, its charm.
The opponents of the Slave Trade tried to enlist this winning voice in the service of their cause.

Cowper disliked the task, but he wrote two or three anti-Slave-Trade ballads.


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