Lowry graduated from Wooster in 1923, took a PhD from
Yale University in 1931, where he was a Sterling Fellow in 1930 and 1933. He rose through the ranks at Wooster to become full professor in 1931. He held a
Guggenheim Fellowship for England in 1934 to study the lives and works of Matthew Arnold and
Arthur Hugh Clough. From 1935 to 1940, he was general editor and education review editor of
New England Quarterly. In 1941, Princeton appointed him professor of English. His inaugural lecture there was titled "Matthew Arnold and the Modern Spirit". Lowry's publications were generally well received.
The New York Times wrote of his edited volume,
The Letters of Matthew Arnold to Arthur Hugh Clough, that "this collection of letters will be of immense interest to students of the Victorian literary scene. The statement should be made stronger; scholars of that period cannot do without them." The reviewer in
Modern Language Review welcomed
The Poetry of Matthew Arnold: A Commentary, written with C.B. Tinker, specifying that "the critical and textual commentary on the individual poems show the ripe scholarship, judgement and understanding of Arnold which we have learnt to expect from the editors." ==College of Wooster==