ABSTRACT

Author of plays, love-lyrics, essays and, among other works, The Civil War, the Davideis and the Pindarique Odes, Abraham Cowley made a deep impression on seventeenth-century letters, attested by his extravagant funeral and his burial next to Chaucer and Spenser in Westminster Abbey. Ejected from Cambridge for his politics, he found refuge in royalist Oxford before seeing long service as secretary to Queen Henrietta Maria, and as a Crown agent, on the continent. In the mid-1650s he returned to England, was imprisoned and made an accommodation with the Cromwellian regime. This volume of essays provides the modern critical attention Cowley’s life and writings merit.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Edited ByPhilip Major

chapter 1|26 pages

Abraham Cowley and Print

Paratexts and Contexts
Edited ByPhilip Major

chapter 2|25 pages

Laurels for the Conquered

Cowley, Epic, and History

chapter 3|22 pages

Generic Dialogue and the Sublime in Cowley

Epic, Didactic, Pindaric

chapter 4|31 pages

Cowley’s Epic Experiments

chapter 6|30 pages

Abraham Cowley’s 1656 Poems

Form and Context

chapter 7|22 pages

The Fruits of Retirement

Political Engagement in the Plantarum Libri Sex

chapter 8|27 pages

Sacred and Secular in Cowley’s Essays

Edited ByPhilip Major

chapter 9|22 pages

‘An Old and Unfashionable Building’

Cowley’s Dramatic Writing and Rewriting

chapter 10|23 pages

‘The Pindarick Way’

Cowley’s Pindarics and the English Libretto