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H. C. CAREY & I. LEA, TOWAR & HOGAN, R. H. SMALL, ROBT.
DESILVER, AND MAROT & WALTER ;

AND

COLLINS & HANNAY, COLLINS & co., W. B. GILLEY, WILDER & CAMPBELL,
J. V. SEAMAN, AND D. MALLORY, NEW-YORK.

William Brown, Printer.
1825.

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TIBRYKA

MEM AOKK

LIVES OF THE POETS.

COWLEY.

THE life of COWLEY, notwithstanding the penury of English biography, has been written by Dr. Sprat, an author whose preg nancy of imagination and elegance of language have deservedly set him high in the ranks of literature; but his zeal of friendship, or ambition of eloquence, has produced a funeral oration rather than a history: he has given the character, not the life of Cowley; for he writes with so little detail, that scarcely any thing is distinctly known, but all is shown confused and enlarg ed through the midst of panegyric.

ABRAHAM COWLEY was born in the year one thousand six hundred and eighteen. His father was a grocer, whose condition Dr. Sprat conceals under the general appellation of a citizen; and, what would probably not have been less carefully suppressed, the omission of his name, in the register of St. Dunstan's parish gives reason to suspect that his father was a secretary. Whoever he was, he died before the birth of his son, and consequently left him to the care of his mother; whom Wood represents as struggling earnestly to procure him a literary eduction, and who, as she lived to the age of eighty, had her solictude rewarded by seeing her son eminent, and, I hope, by seeing him fortunate, and partaking his prosperity. We know at least, from Sprat's account, that he always acknowledged her care and justly paid the dues of filial gratitude.

In the window of his mother's apartment lay Spenser's Fairy Queen; in which he very early took delight to read, till, by feeling the charms of verse, he became, as he relates, irrecoverably a poet. Such are the accidents, which sometimes remembered, and perhaps sometimes forgotten, produce that particular designation of mind, and propensity for some certain science or employment, which is commonly called genius. The true genius is a mind of large general powers, accidently determined to VOL. V.-B

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