Literary Criticism (1400-1800)

Denham, John | W. Hutchings (essay date 1983)

W. Hutchings (essay date 1983)

SOURCE: Hutchings, W. “‘The Harmony of Things’: Denham's Coopers Hill as Descriptive Poem.” Papers on Language and Literature 19, No. 4 (Fall 1983): 375-84.

[In the following essay, Hutchings maintains that, rather than merely serving as a vehicle for political commentary, the description of landscape in Coopers Hill gives the poem its structure and sense of order.]

Coopers Hill has been honored as a poem for three centuries, but it deserves to be more famous as a historical document.”1 So John M. Wallace sets out the approach which his essay on Denham's poem displays so comprehensively; an approach towards which modern criticism has tended since Earl Wasserman's highly influential reading in The Subtler Language.2 Wallace's argument, that Coopers Hill reveals its author's “Parliamentary Royalism” in a precise, historical context, and...

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