William Cowper

William Cowper
archive.episcopalchurch.org
Short Name: William Cowper
Full Name: Cowper, William, 1731-1800
Birth Year: 1731
Death Year: 1800

William Cowper (pronounced "Cooper"; b. Berkampstead, Hertfordshire, England, 1731; d. East Dereham, Norfolk, England, 1800) is regarded as one of the best early Romantic poets. To biographers he is also known as "mad Cowper." His literary talents produced some of the finest English hymn texts, but his chronic depression accounts for the somber tone of many of those texts. Educated to become an attorney, Cowper was called to the bar in 1754 but never practiced law. In 1763 he had the opportunity to become a clerk for the House of Lords, but the dread of the required public examination triggered his tendency to depression, and he attempted suicide. His subsequent hospitalization and friendship with Morley and Mary Unwin provided emotional stability, but the periods of severe depression returned. His depression was deepened by a religious bent, which often stressed the wrath of God, and at times Cowper felt that God had predestined him to damnation.

For the last two decades of his life Cowper lived in Olney, where John Newton became his pastor. There he assisted Newton in his pastoral duties, and the two collaborated on the important hymn collection Olney Hymns (1779), to which Cowper contributed sixty-eight hymn texts.

Bert Polman

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Cowper, William, the poet. The leading events in the life of Cowper are: born in his father's rectory, Berkhampstead, Nov. 26, 1731; educated at Westminster; called to the Bar, 1754; madness, 1763; residence at Huntingdon, 1765; removal to Olney, 1768; to Weston, 1786; to East Dereham, 1795; death there, April 25, 1800.
The simple life of Cowper, marked chiefly by its innocent recreations and tender friendships, was in reality a tragedy. His mother, whom he commemorated in the exquisite "Lines on her picture," a vivid delineation of his childhood, written in his 60th year, died when he was six years old. At his first school he was profoundly wretched, but happier at Westminster; excelling at cricket and football, and numbering Warren Hastings, Colman, and the future model of his versification. Churchill, among his contemporaries or friends. Destined for the Bar, he was articled to a solicitor, along with Thurlow. During this period he fell in love with his cousin, Theodora Cowper, sister to Lady Hesketh, and wrote love poems to her. The marriage was forbidden by her father, but she never forgot him, and in after years secretly aided his necessities. Fits of melancholy, from which he had suffered in school days, began to increase, as he entered on life, much straitened in means after his father's death. But on the whole, it is the playful, humorous side of him that is most prominent in the nine years after his call to the Bar; spent in the society of Colman, Bonnell Thornton, and Lloyd, and in writing satires for The Connoisseur and St. James's Chronicle and halfpenny ballads. Then came the awful calamity, which destroyed all hopes of distinction, and made him a sedentary invalid, dependent on his friends. He had been nominated to the Clerkship of the Journals of the House of Lords, but the dread of appearing before them to show his fitness for the appointment overthrew his reason. He attempted his life with "laudanum, knife and cord,"—-in the third attempt nearly succeeding. The dark delusion of his life now first showed itself—a belief in his reprobation by God. But for the present, under the wise and Christian treatment of Dr. Cotton (q. v.) at St. Albans, it passed away; and the eight years that followed, of which the two first were spent at Huntingdon (where he formed his lifelong friendship with Mrs. Unwin), and the remainder at Olney in active piety among the poor, and enthusiastic devotions under the guidance of John Newton (q. v.), were full of the realisation of God's favour, and the happiest, most lucid period of his life. But the tension of long religious exercises, the nervous excitement of leading at prayer meetings, and the extreme despondence (far more than the Calvinism) of Newton, could scarcely have been a healthy atmosphere for a shy, sensitive spirit, that needed most of all the joyous sunlight of Christianity. A year after his brother's death, madness returned. Under the conviction that it was the command of God, he attempted suicide; and he then settled down into a belief in stark contradiction to his Calvinistic creed, "that the Lord, after having renewed him in holiness, had doomed him to everlasting perdition" (Southey). In its darkest form his affliction lasted sixteen months, during which he chiefly resided in J. Newton's house, patiently tended by him and by his devoted nurse, Mrs. Unwin. Gradually he became interested in carpentering, gardening, glazing, and the tendance of some tame hares and other playmates. At the close of 1780, Mrs. Unwin suggested to him some serious poetical work; and the occupation proved so congenial, that his first volume was published in 1782. To a gay episode in 1783 (his fascination by the wit of Lady Austen) his greatest poem, The Task, and also John Gilpin were owing. His other principal work was his Homer, published in 1791. The dark cloud had greatly lifted from his life when Lady Hesketh's care accomplished his removal to Weston (1786): but the loss of his dear friend William Unwin lowered it again for some months. The five years' illness of Mrs. Unwin, during which his nurse of old became his tenderly-watched patient, deepened the darkness more and more. And her death (1796) brought “fixed despair," of which his last poem, The Castaway, is the terrible memorial. Perhaps no more beautiful sentence has been written of him, than the testimony of one, who saw him after death, that with the "composure and calmness" of the face there “mingled, as it were, a holy surprise."

Cowper's poetry marks the dawn of the return from the conventionality of Pope to natural expression, and the study of quiet nature. His ambition was higher than this, to be the Bard of Christianity. His great poems show no trace of his monomania, and are full of healthy piety. His fame as a poet is less than as a letter-writer: the charm of his letters is unsurpassed. Though the most considerable poet, who has written hymns, he has contributed little to the development of their structure, adopting the traditional modes of his time and Newton's severe canons. The spiritual ideas of the hymns are identical with Newton's: their highest note is peace and thankful contemplation, rather than joy: more than half of them are full of trustful or reassuring faith: ten of them are either submissive (44), self-reproachful (17, 42, 43), full of sad yearning (1, 34), questioning (9), or dark spiritual conflict (38-40). The specialty of Cowper's handling is a greater plaintiveness, tenderness, and refinement. A study of these hymns as they stood originally under the classified heads of the Olney Hymns, 1779, which in some cases probably indicate the aim of Cowper as well as the ultimate arrangement of the book by Newton, shows that one or two hymns were more the history of his conversion, than transcripts of present feelings; and the study of Newton's hymns in the same volume, full of heavy indictment against the sins of his own regenerate life, brings out the peculiar danger of his friendship to the poet: it tends also to modify considerably the conclusions of Southey as to the signs of incipient madness in Cowper's maddest hymns. Cowper's best hymns are given in The Book of Praise by Lord Selborne. Two may be selected from them; the exquisitely tender "Hark! my soul, it is the Lord" (q. v.), and "Oh, for a closer walk with God" (q. v.). Anyone who knows Mrs. Browning's noble lines on Cowper's grave will find even a deeper beauty in the latter, which is a purely English hymn of perfect structure and streamlike cadence, by connecting its sadness and its aspiration not only with the “discord on the music" and the "darkness on the glory," but the rapture of his heavenly waking beneath the "pathetic eyes” of Christ.

Authorities. Lives, by Hayley; Grimshaw; Southey; Professor Goldwin Smith; Mr. Benham (attached to Globe Edition); Life of Newton, by Rev. Josiah Bull; and the Olney Hymns. The numbers of the hymns quoted refer to the Olney Hymns. [Rev. H. Leigh Bennett, M.A.]

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

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Cowper, W. , p. 265, i. Other hymns are:—
1. Holy Lord God, I love Thy truth. Hatred of Sin.
2. I was a grovelling creature once. Hope and Confidence.
3. No strength of nature can suffice. Obedience through love.
4. The Lord receives His highest praise. Faith.
5. The saints should never be dismayed. Providence. All these hymns appeared in the Olney Hymns, 1779.

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)

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Cowper, W., p. 265, i. Prof. John E. B. Mayor, of Cambridge, contributed some letters by Cowper, hitherto unpublished, together with notes thereon, to Notes and Queries, July 2 to Sept. 24, 1904. These letters are dated from Huntingdon, where he spent two years after leaving St. Alban's (see p. 265, i.), and Olney. The first is dated "Huntingdon, June 24, 1765," and the last "From Olney, July 14, 1772." They together with extracts from other letters by J. Newton (dated respectively Aug. 8, 1772, Nov. 4, 1772), two quotations without date, followed by the last in the N. & Q. series, Aug. 1773, are of intense interest to all students of Cowper, and especially to those who have given attention to the religious side of the poet's life, with its faint lights and deep and awful shadows. From the hymnological standpoint the additional information which we gather is not important, except concerning the hymns "0 for a closer walk with God," "God moves in a mysterious way," "Tis my happiness below," and "Hear what God, the Lord, hath spoken." Concerning the last three, their position in the manuscripts, and the date of the last from J. Newton in the above order, "Aug. 1773," is conclusive proof against the common belief that "God moves in a mysterious way" was written as the outpouring of Cowper's soul in gratitude for the frustration of his attempted suicide in October 1773.

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Wikipedia Biography

William Cowper (/ˈkuːpər/ KOO-pər; 26 November 1731 – 25 April 1800) was an English poet and Anglican hymnwriter. One of the most popular poets of his time, Cowper changed the direction of 18th-century nature poetry by writing of everyday life and scenes of the English countryside. In many ways, he was one of the forerunners of Romantic poetry. Samuel Taylor Coleridge called him "the best modern poet", whilst William Wordsworth particularly admired his poem Yardley-Oak.

Texts by William Cowper (256)sort ascendingAsAuthority LanguagesInstances
願更與神親密同行 (Yuàn gèng yǔ shén qīnmì tóngxíng)William Cowper (Author)Chinese2
有一血泉,血流盈滿,湧自耶穌肋邊;(Yǒuyī xuè quán, xuè liú yíng mǎn, yǒng zì yēsū lē biān;)William Cowper (Author)Chinese2
ينبوع جود من دم زاك جرىWilliam Cowper (Author)Arabic1
ينبوع دم سال منWilliam Cowper (Author)Arabic1
Ye timid saints, fresh courage takeCowper (Author)English12
Ye sons of earth prepare the ploughWilliam Cowper (Author)English15
Ye linnets, let us try, beneath this groveWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Ye careless ones, O, hear betimesCowper (Author)2
Write to Sardis, (said the Lord)William Cowper (Author)English13
我當敬聽主聲音 (Wǒ dāng jìng tīng zhǔ shēngyīn)William Cowper (Author)Chinese3
With all his sufferings full in viewWilliam Cowper (Author)2
Wilds horrid and dark with o'er shadowing treesWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Wie herrlich leuchtet Gottes WortWilliam Cowper (Author)German4
When Jesus hung upon the treeCowper (Author)English1
When I review my waysWilliam Cowper (Author)2
When Hagar found the bottle spentCowper (Author)English7
When darkness long has vailed my mindCowper (Author)English99
When all within is peaceWilliam Cowper (Author)2
What various hindrances we meetWilliam Cowper (Author)English405
What thousands never knew the roadWilliam Cowper (Author)English11
Weak and irresolute is manCowper (Author)38
'Twas my purpose, on a dayWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Too many, Lord, abuse Thy graceWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
To Thee our wants are knownWilliam Cowper (Author)English14
To tell the Savior all my wantsWilliam Cowper (Author)English5
To me remains nor place, nor timeWilliam Cowper (Author)2
To lay the soul that loves him lowWilliam Cowper (Translator)English3
To keep the lamp aliveCowper (Author)English57
To Jesus, the crown of my hopeWilliam Cowper (Author)English108
'Tis my privilege belowWilliam Cowper (Author)2
'Tis my happiness belowWilliam Cowper (Author)English200
"Tis folly all" let me no more be toldWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Thy providence supplies our foodWilliam Cowper (Author)English4
Thy mansion is the Christian's heartWilliam Cowper (Author)English5
Thrice holy Lord, I love thy truthWilliam Cowper (Author)3
Thou Spirit of eternal truthWilliam Cowper (Author)2
Thou hast no lightnings, O thou Just!William Cowper (Translator)English2
Thou dying Lamb, thy precious bloodWilliam Cowper (Author)1
This is the feast of heavenly wineWilliam Cowper (Author)English41
This God is the God we adoreCowper (Author)English3
There's not an echo round meWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
There is a stream of precious bloodWm. Cowper (Author)English2
There is a fountain filled with blood Drawn from Emmanuel's veinsWilliam Cowper (Author)English1973
The Spirit breathes upon the WordWilliam Cowper (Author)English234
The Savior, what a noble flameWilliam Cowper (Author)English48
The saints should never be dismayedWilliam Cowper (Author)22
The rose had been washedWilliam Cowper (Author)2
The path of sorrow, and that path aloneWilliam Cowper (Author)1
The newborn child of gospel graceWilliam Cowper (Author)English26
The Lord will happiness divineWilliam Cowper (1731-1800) (Author)English99
The Lord send peace, offending manWilliam Cowper (Author)2
The Lord receives his highest praiseWilliam Cowper (Author)English15
The Lord proclaims his grace abroadWilliam Cowper (Author)English6
The Lord of all thingsWilliam Cowper (Author)2
The joy that vain amusements giveCowper (Author)7
The fountain in its sourceWilliam Cowper (Translator)English11
The evils that beset our pathWilliam Cowper (Author)2
The dying thief rejoiced to seeWilliam Cowper (Author)English3
The dearest idol I have knownWilliam Cowper (Author)1
The calm retreat, the silent shadeWilliam Cowper (Author)8
The billows swell, the winds are highWilliam Cowper (Author)English106
Thankless for favors from on highWilliam Cowper (Author)1
Sweet tenants of this grove!William Cowper (Translator)English2
Sun! stay thy course, this moment stayWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Still, still, without ceasingWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Source of love, my brighter sunWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Source of love, and light of dayWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Sometimes a light surprisesW. Cowper (Author)English328
Sleep at last has fled these eyesWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Sin has undone our wretched raceWilliam Cowper (Author)English14
Sin enslaved me many yearsWilliam Cowper (Author)English18
神用奧祕行動前來 (Shén yòng àomì xíngdòng qián lái)William Cowper (Author)Chinese2
Self love no grace in sorrow seesWilliam Cowper (Author)6
Seht wie der Heiland aller WeltWilliam Cowper (Author)German2
See what unbounded zeal and loveWilliam Cowper (Author)3
Season of my purest pleasureWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Saa mange Hindringer vi saaWilliam Cowper (Author)2
രക്തം നിറഞ്ഞോരുറവ ഉണ്ടല്ലോ പാപിക്കായ് (Raktaṁ niṟaññēāruṟava uṇṭallēā pāpikkāy)William Cowper (Author)Malayalam2
Prayer makes the darkest clouds withdrawWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
Prayer makes the darkened cloud withdrawWilliam Cowper (Author)English3
Prayer is appointed to conveyWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
பொங்கிடும் உதிர ஊற்றுண்டு இம்மானுவேலினதே (Poṅkiṭum utira ūṟṟuṇṭu im'māṉuvēliṉatē)William Cowper (Author)Tamil2
Pity, O Lord, my sinful heartWilliam Cowper (Author)2
Peace has unveiled her smiling faceWilliam Cowper (Translator)English3
Pa underbara v'gar garWilliam Cowper (Author)2
På dunke stig går Gud framåtW. Cowper (Author)Swedish2
¡Oh si pudiese á Dios aproximarmeWilliam Cowper (Author)Spanish2
¡Oh! quién pudiera andar con Dios, Su dulce paz gozarWilliam Cowper (Author)Spanish6
O loved, but not enough, though dearer farWilliam Cowper (Translator)English3
¡Oh Dios, si a ti pudiese aproximarmeGuillermo Cowper (Author)Spanish2
Of all the gifts Thine hand [love] bestowsWilliam Cowper (Author)English14
O Thou, by long experience triedWilliam Cowper (Translator)English12
O most delightful hour by manCowper (Author)5
O love, of pure and heavenly birth!William Cowper (Translator)English2
O Lord, my best desires fulfillWilliam Cowper (Author)English200
O Lord, in sorrow I resignWilliam Cowper (Translator)2
O Lord, how full of sweet contentWilliam Cowper (Translator)English19
O how I love thy holy wordWilliam Cowper (Author)23
O God, whose favorable eyeWilliam Cowper (Author)English20
O for that tenderness of heartCowper (Author)English2
O for a heart to praise my GodWm. Cowper (Author)English7
O! for a closer walk with GodWilliam Cowper (Author)English1030
Now theirs was converse such as it behovesWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
Now may He Who from the deadCowper (Author)English5
Now is the time, the accepted hourWilliam Cowper (Author)English32
No strength of nature can sufficeWilliam Cowper (Author)English26
No more I ask or hope to findCowper (Author)English6
No longer I follow a soundWilliam Cowper (Author)3
Night! how I love thy silent shadesWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Ni damu idondokayoWilliam Cowper (Author)Swahili2
你愛所給雖然甚多,恩賜眾善者哪 ! (Nǐ ài suǒ gěi suīrán shén duō, ēncì zhòng shàn zhě nǎ)William Cowper (Author)Chinese2
My Spouse! in whose presence I liveWilliam Cowper (Translator)English3
My span of life will soon be doneWilliam Cowper (Author)English45
My soul is sad, and much dismayedWilliam Cowper (Author)1
My song shall bless the Lord of allWilliam Cowper (Author)32
My sole possession is Thy love, O LordWilliam Cowper (Translator)English3
My Savior, whom absent I loveWilliam Cowper (Author)English27
My Lord, with thee I find contentWilliam Cowper (Author)2
My Lord, how full of sweet contentWilliam Cowper (Translator)English30
My heart is easy, and my burden lightWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
My God, how perfect are thy waysWilliam Cowper (Author)12
My former hopes are fledCowper (Author)English91
My country, Lord, art thou aloneWilliam Cowper (Author)2
My bowels yearn o'er dying menCowper (Author)3
Messiah's come, with joy beholdWilliam Cowper (Author)1
Man's wisdom is to seekWilliam Cowper (Author)English13
Maka oyate kiŋ owasWilliam Cowper (Author)Dakota1
Love is the Lord whom I obeyWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Love! if thy destined sacrifice am IWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Lord [Long], unafflicted, undismayedWilliam Cowper (Author)English14
Long plunged in sorrow, I resignWilliam Cowper (Author)English3
Like crowded forest trees we standWilliam Cowper (Author)2
Life can bring with it nothingWilliam Cowper (Author)2
Kuna chemchem itokayoWilliam Cowper (Author)Swahili2
Kennst du den Quell, der blutig fließtWilliam Cowper (Author)German2
കേൾക്ക എ-ന്റെ ആത്മാവേ യേശു മനസ്സലിഞ്ഞു (Kēḷkka e-nṟe ātmāvē yēśu manas'saliññu)William Cowper (Author)Malayalam2
Ka'a mau ke Akua e hana'eWilliam Cowper (Author)Hawaiian3
Judge not the Lord by feeble senseWilliam Cowper (Author)3
Jesus, whose blood so freely streamedCowper (Author)10
Jesus, wherever Thy people meetWilliam Cowper (Author)English429
Jesus! the name high over all, In hell or earth or skyWilliam Cowper (Author (B))English1
Jesus, lover of my soul, Let me to Thy bosom flyCowper (Author)English11
Jesus, I love Thy charming NameWilliam Cowper (Author)English1
Jest źródło skąd na grzeszny światWilliam Cowper (Author)Polish2
Jehovah moves in mysteryWilliam Cowper (Author)2
Jealous, and with love o'erflowingWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
It happened on a solemn eventideWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
Israel in ancient daysWilliam Cowper (Author)English73
Infinite God, thou great unrivaled oneWilliam Cowper (Author)1
In vain ye woo me to your harmless joysWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
In holy contemplation we sweetly now pursueWilliam Cowper (Author)English20
ഇമ്മാനുവേല്‍ തന്‍ ചങ്കതില്‍ നിന്നൊഴുകും രക്തം (Im'mānuvēl tan caṅkatil ninneāḻukuṁ raktaṁ)William Cowper (Author)Malayalam2
If life in sorrow must be spentWilliam Cowper (Translator)English5
I will praise thee every dayWilliam Cowper (Author)English18
I was a groveling creature onceWilliam Cowper (Author)English22
I thirst, but not as once I didCowper (Author)English49
I suffer fruitless anguish day by dayWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
I place an offering at thy shrineWilliam Cowper (Translator)English3
"I love the Lord" is still the strainWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
I love my God, but with no love of mineWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
I am monarch of all I surveyWilliam Cowper (Author)2
I am fond of the swallow, I learn from her flightWilliam Cowper (Translator)English4
How wondrous was the burning zealWilliam Cowper (Author)3
How sweet the name of Jesus sounds In a believer's earCowper (Author)English2
How sweet it is to walk with GodWilliam Cowper (Author)4
How long beneath the law I layCowper (Author)English19
How happy are the new born raceWilliam Cowper (Author)English12
How blest thy creature is, O GodWilliam Cowper (Author)27
How blest is man, O GodCowper (Author)English6
How are Thy servants blest! O LordWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
Hört was Gott der Herr gesprochenWm. Cowper (Translator)German4
Horch', meine Seele, auf ein WortWilliam Cowper (Author)German3
Honor and happiness unite William Cowper (Author)English25
Holy Lord God, I love thy truthWilliam Cowper (Author)13
His master taken from his head, Elisha sawCowper (Author)14
Hear what God the Lord hath spokenWilliam Cowper (Author)English161
Hear, Lord, the song of praise and prayerWilliam Cowper (Author)17
Healer Divine, O hear our prayerWilliam Cowper (Author)2
Heal us, Immaneul, here we areWilliam Cowper, 1731-1800 (Author)English54
He is a freeman, whom the truth makes freeCowper (Author)2
Hay una fuente sin igual William Cowper (Author)Spanish9
Hay una fuente carmesíWilliam Cowper (Author)Spanish3
Hay un precioso manantialWilliam Cowper (Author)Spanish9
Hark, my soul! it is the Lord!William Cowper (Author)English507
Had I a throne above the restWilliam Cowper (Author)11
Gracious Lord, our children seeWilliam Cowper (Author)English20
Grace triumphant on [in] the throneWilliam Cowper (Author)4
Grace is a plant, wherever it growsWilliam Cowper (Author)English15
Gottlob, auch mir strömt dort die FlutWilliam Cowper (Author)German3
God of my life, to Thee I callWilliam Cowper (Author)English105
God of my life, to thee My cheerful soul I raiseCowper (Author)English1
God never meant that man should scale the heavensWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
God moves in a mysterious wayW. Cowper (Author)English907
God gives his mercies to be spentWilliam Cowper (Author)5
Geheimnisvoll in tiefer NachtWilliam Cowper (Author)German11
Geheimnisvoll, gerecht und hehrWilliam Cowper (Author)German2
From thorny wilds a monster cameWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
From Calvary's cross a fountain flowsWilliam Cowper (Author)3
Friend of the friendless and the faintWilliam Cowper (Author)13
Forgive the song that falls so lowWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
Forc'd from home and all its pleasuresCowper (Author)English2
For thou, within no walls confinedWilliam Cowper (Author)2
For mercies, countless as the sandsWilliam Cowper (Author)English1
Fierce passions discompose the mindCowper (Author)English4
Father of mercies, in Thy wordCowper (Author)English1
Far from the world, O Lord, I fleeWilliam Cowper (Author)English190
Es quillt ein Born mit LebensblutW. Cowper (Author)German2
Es quillt ein Born gefüllt mit BlutW. Cowper (Author)German4
Es ist ein Born gefüllt mit BlutWilliam Cowper (Author)German2
Es ist ein Born daraus heil'ges BlutWilliam Cowper (Author)German8
Es gibt ein' Born gefüllt mit BlutWilliam Cowper (Author)German1
Ere God had built the mountainsWilliam Cowper (Author)English15
En vand ring helt, o Gud, med digWilliam Cowper (Author)2
என் வாழ்வின் ஆண்டவர் நீர் தாமே (Eṉ vāḻviṉ āṇṭavar nīr tāmē)William Cowper (Author)Tamil2
Ein Quell, voll von Immanuels BlutWilliam Cowper (Author)German2
Ein heil'ger Born, gefüllt mit BlutWm. Cowper (Author)German10
E'er since, by faith, I saw the streamCowper (Author)English2
Dios obra por senderos misteriososWilliam Cowper (Author)Spanish2
Der er en kilde fyldt med blodWilliam Cowper (Author)Norwegian2
Dear Lord, accept a sinful heartWilliam Cowper (Author)12
Dear fountain of delight unknownWilliam Cowper (Author)6
Dear dying Lamb thy precious bloodWilliam Cowper (Author)3
De sangre diéronnos raudalWilliam Cowper (Author)Spanish2
Där flöt en gång från korsets stamWilliam Cowper (Author)Swedish3
Dangers of every shape and nameCowper (Author)5
Damu imebubuji ka, Ni ya ImanueliWilliam Cowper (Author)Swahili1
Courage, my soul, thy bitter crossWilliam Cowper (Author)4
Con maravillas obra DiosWilliam Cowper (Author)Spanish2
Come Lord and bless the rising raceWilliam Cowper (Author)10
Come, let us lift our joyful eyesWilliam Cowper (Author)English1
Christian, do you hear the Lord?William Cowper, 1731-1880 (Author)English5
Children of God lack nothingWilliam Cowper (Author)English5
By whom was David taughtWilliam Cowper (Author)English63
Blinded in youth by Satan's artsWilliam Cowper (Author)4
Blest! who, far from all mankindWilliam Cowper (Translator)English2
Blest is the dear, uniting loveCowper (Author)English2
Beware of Peter's wordCowper (Author)6
Bestow, O Lord, upon our youthWilliam Cowper (Author)English74
Bear on, my soul, the bitter crossWilliam Cowper (Author)3
Aus Jesu Wunden quillt das BlutCowper (Author)German3
As birds their infant brood protectWilliam Cowper (Author)English23
أقرب ما دمت إلى مخلصي القديرWilliam Cowper (Author)Arabic1
Approach, my soul, the mercy seatWm Cowper (Author)English3
Aparte del mundo, Señor, me retiroGuillermo Cowper (Author)Spanish1
ஆண்டவருடன் நடக்க (Āṇṭavaruṭaṉ naṭakka)William Cowper (Author)Tamil2
Amazing grace! (how sweet the sound)William Cowper (1731-1800) (Author)English5
Almighty King, whose wondrous handCowper (Author)16
All scenes alike engaging proveWilliam Cowper (1731-1800) (Translator)English2
All flesh is grass, and all its glory fadesWilliam Cowper (Author)English2
All are indebted much to theeWilliam Cowper (Translator)English3
അജ്ഞാതമേ തൻ ചെയ്തികൾ (Ajñātaṁ tan ceytikaḷ)William Cowper (Author)Malayalam2
Ah! reign, wherever man is found!William Cowper (Translator)English3
Adieu, ye vain delights of earthWilliam Cowper (Author)1
What glory gilds the sacred pageWilliam Cowper, 1731-1800 (Author)English288
A fountain, Holy Lamb of GodCowper (Author)English1
විසඳන්ට මෙලෝ නැණින් (Visan̆danṭa melō næṇin)William Cowper (Author)Sinhala2

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