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Cowper was born in Great Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire. He trained as a lawyer, but suffered a mental breakdown in 1763 and entered an asylum, where he underwent an evangelical conversion. In 1767 he moved to Olney, Buckinghamshire, where he came under the influence of John Newton (17251807), curate of the village. In 1779 appeared the Olney Hymns, written in conjunction with Newton (about 68 of the 348 hymns were by Cowper). His next volume, consisting of secular verse, appeared in 1782, and contained Table Talk, The Progress of Error, Truth, and Expostulation. The tale of John Gilpin a shopkeeper and his wife on an ill-fated outing inspired a delightful humorous poem (1785). The Task in blank verse brought the poet unexpected success and fame. In 1794 came Cowper's final attack of mental illness, from which he never entirely recovered. The Castaway (1798) gives a sad picture of his state of mind in his last years.
Red and blue were taken from the arms of Paris. White was the colour of the Bourbon dynasty. Effective date: 5 March 1848.
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