From Lectures on the English Poets, by William Hazlitt
COWPER
"His life was an unhappy one. It was embittered by a morbid affection,
and by his religious sentiments. Nor are we to wonder at this, or bring
it as a charge against religion; for it is the nature of the poetical
temperament to carry every thing to excess, whether it be love,
religion, pleasure, or pain, as we may see in the case of Cowper and of
Burns, and to find torment or rapture in that in which others merely
find a resource from ennui, or a relaxation from common occupation."
From Lecture V. Thomson and Cowper
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