Sir John Denham was born in Dublin, but was brought to England in 1617
by his father, also Sir John Denham, to be educated in London and at Trinity
College, Oxford. He spent his childhood in
Egham on an estate called Denham Place which was situated in Vicarage Road
where the Police Station is now. The house was demolished
in the middle of the 19th century. After Oxford,
Denham studied law in Lincoln's Inn where he was "given more to dice and
cards than to study". However he was called to the Bar
in 1639. At the outbreak of the Civil War, he joined King
Charles I and was appointed Governor of Farnham Castle, being imprisoned when
it was captured by Roundhead forces. On his release, he went to
Oxford, where he produced in 1641 a tragedy called
"The Sophy" which was well received. In 1641 he published the first
version of "Cooper's Hill", the poem for which he
is best remembered. He worked secretly for Charles I and had to escape to Holland in 1648, later collecting money in Poland to
support Charles II and coming back to England on
several occasions to spy on the King's behalf. At the Restoration he was appointed Surveyor-General of Works with Christopher Wren as
his deputy. He was created a Knight of the Bath in 1661. He is buried
in Poet's Corner in Westminster Abbey.
The poem "Cooper's-Hill" was the first influential English
poem in the topographical genre and Samuel
Johnson wrote in a biographical introduction to Denham's
poems1, "Coopers' Hill is the work
that confers upon him the rank and dignity of an original author. To trace a
new scheme of poetry has in itself a very high claim to
praise". John Dryden wrote, "Coopers-Hill; a poem, which for majesty of style, is, and ever will be, the standard of good
writing". Alexander Pope celebrated "Cooper's Hill" by
imitating it in his poem "Windsor Castle"
The poem was published at least seven times in the 17th century, and
there are two distinct versions. The early editions
are radically different from the 1655 edition. In an article2 in
1957, Professor Rufus Putney puts a different interpretation on
the whole poem, describing it not as a series
of reflections on the view, but as a view of England's "political turmoil
and imminent peril" In conclusion, he states
"The political position Denham sought to persuade his countrymen to accept was intelligent and reasonable. That he reached it painfully and
stated it honestly the poem testifies. No argument could
transmute Cooper's Hill into a masterpiece, but to read it in the political context that provoked it is to gain new respect for the poet
and admiration for the poem".
Various editions of Denham's poems, and articles and biographical
details about the poet can be found in the Oliver Collection
which is housed in the Depository Library.
Items displayed in this exhibition are listed below.
1 This biographical introduction
is contained in "The works of the English poets, from Chaucer to
Cowper", edited by... Dr Samuel Johnson, vol. 7, 1810.
2 "The view from Cooper's
Hill", by Rufus Putney in University of Colorado Studies, 1957.
Expans'd Hieroglyphicks: a critical edition of Sir John Denham's Coopers Hill by Brendan O Hehir. 1969.
The poetical works of Sir John Denham, with the life of the author. 1780
Coopers-Hill. A poem...by Sir John Denham, Knight of the Bath. 1709
View of "The Place", Egham, built by the poet's father, Sir
John Denham, a judge, where the poet spent his early years
"Lost," "authorized," and "pirated"
editions of John Denham's Coopers Hill. A photocopy of the first page of an article
by Brendan O Hehir, published in the Publications of the
Modern Language Association, LXXIX, 1964.
A photocopy of a likeness of the poet taken from the
Apollo Press edition of "The poetical works of Sir John Denham, 1780
A copy of a letter from the poet to Charles II after his father Charles
I had been imprisoned by Cromwell's army, contained in
"Coopers hill. A poem", 1709
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