The learned quiet of the young poet's life was disrupted by the
Civil War in 1642 as he warmly espoused the royalist side. He became a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, but was ejected by the Parliamentarians in 1643. He made his way to Oxford, where he enjoyed the friendship of Lord Falkland, and gained the personal confidence of the royal family. After the
Battle of Marston Moor he followed the queen to Paris, where his exile lasted twelve years. This period was spent almost entirely in the royal service, "bearing a share in the distresses of the royal family, or labouring in their affairs. To this purpose he performed several dangerous journeys into
Jersey,
Scotland, Flanders, the
Netherlands, or wherever else the king's troubles required his attendance. But the chief testimony of his fidelity was the laborious service he underwent in maintaining the constant correspondence between the late king and the queen his wife. In that weighty trust he behaved himself with indefatigable integrity and unsuspected secrecy; for he ciphered and deciphered with his own hand the greatest part of all the letters that passed between their majesties, and managed a vast intelligence in many other parts, which for some years together took up all his days, and two or three nights every week." During his exile, Cowley wrote a history of the Civil War (which did not get published in full until 1973). In the preface to his 1656
Poems, Cowley mentioned that he had completed three books of an epic poem on the Civil War, but had left it unfinished after the
First Battle of Newbury when the Royalist cause began to lose significant ground. In the preface, Cowley indicated that he had destroyed all copies of the poem, but this was not precisely the truth. In 1679, twelve years after Cowley's death, a shortened version of the first book of the poem, called
A Poem on the Late Civil War was published. It was assumed that the rest of the poem had indeed been destroyed or lost until the mid-20th century when scholar
Allan Pritchard discovered the first of two extant manuscript copies of the whole poem among the Cowper family papers. Thus, the three completed books of Cowley's great (albeit unfinished) English epic,
The Civill Warre (otherwise spelled "The Civil War"), was finally published in full for the first time in 1973. In 1647 a collection of his love verses, entitled
The Mistress, was published, and in the next year a volume of wretched satires,
The Four Ages of England, was brought out under his name, with the composition of which he had nothing to do. In spite of the troubled times, usually so fatal to poetic fame, his reputation steadily increased, and when, on his return to England in 1656, he published a volume of his collected poetical works, he found himself without a rival in public esteem. This volume included the
Pindarique Odes, the
Davideis,
The Mistress and some
Miscellanies. Among the latter are to be found Cowley's most vital pieces. This section of his works opens with the famous aspiration: It contains elegies on
Wotton,
Vandyck, Falkland, William Hervey and
Crashaw, the last two being among Cowley's finest poems, brilliant, sonorous and original; the amusing ballad of
The Chronicle, giving a fictitious catalogue of his supposed amours; various
gnomic pieces; and some charming paraphrases from Anacreon. The
Pindarique Odes contain weighty lines and passages, buried in irregular and inharmonious masses of moral verbiage. Not more than one or two are good throughout, but a full posy of beauties may easily be culled from them. The long cadences of the
Alexandrines with which most of the strophes close, continued to echo in English poetry from
Dryden down to
Gray, but the
Odes themselves, which were found to be obscure by the poet's contemporaries, immediately fell into disesteem. The 1656 edition includes the notorious passage in which Cowley abjures his loyalty to the crown: "yet when the event of battle, and the unaccountable will of God has determined the controversie, and that we have submitted to the conditions of the Conqueror, we must lay down our Pens as well as Arms, we must march out of our Cause itself, and dismantle that, as well as our own Towns and Castles, of all the Works and Fortifications as Wit and Reason by which we defended it."
The Mistress was the most popular poetic reading of the age, and is now the least read of all Cowley's works. It was the last and most violent expression of the amatory affectation of the 17th century, an affectation which had been endurable in
Donne and other early writers because it had been the vehicle of sincere emotion, but some find it complex in Cowley because for him it represented nothing but a love sublimation besides a rhetoric exercise, an exhibition of literary richness. He appears to have been of a reserved disposition; in the face of these elaborately erotic volumes, we are told that to the end of his days he never spoke of love to a single woman in real life. The "Leonora" of
The Chronicle is said to have been the only woman he ever loved, and she married the brother of his biographer, Sprat. ==Return to England==