"A self-made man? Yes, and one who worships his creator"
About this Quote
The joke lands because it punctures a national myth with a pin sized exactly for the ego. Cowper’s line takes the swaggering boast of the “self-made man” and flips it into a theological punchline: if you truly made yourself, then congratulations - you’ve also invented a new deity, and you’re kneeling to it. The wit is compressed, almost epigrammatic, but the target is roomy: vanity disguised as virtue.
Cowper is writing in an England where commercial modernity is starting to manufacture a new kind of hero: the industrious individual who rises by grit, thrift, and good sense. That story sounds democratic, even moral. Cowper’s subtext is that it’s also spiritually dangerous. Self-reliance, pushed past a sane limit, becomes self-worship. The “creator” here isn’t God, it’s the ego posing as Providence, a private religion with one congregant and one idol.
The line also carries an Augustan-era suspicion of inflated rhetoric. “Self-made” is a phrase that pretends to humility (I worked hard) while smuggling in omnipotence (I owe nothing). Cowper’s irony exposes the hidden theology in modern boasting: every origin story needs a maker, and if you erase God, you tend to reinstall yourself.
Intent-wise, it’s less an argument than a corrective. Cowper isn’t denying effort or ambition; he’s warning that the celebration of autonomy can curdle into a moral blindness where gratitude, community, and grace are edited out of the autobiography.
Cowper is writing in an England where commercial modernity is starting to manufacture a new kind of hero: the industrious individual who rises by grit, thrift, and good sense. That story sounds democratic, even moral. Cowper’s subtext is that it’s also spiritually dangerous. Self-reliance, pushed past a sane limit, becomes self-worship. The “creator” here isn’t God, it’s the ego posing as Providence, a private religion with one congregant and one idol.
The line also carries an Augustan-era suspicion of inflated rhetoric. “Self-made” is a phrase that pretends to humility (I worked hard) while smuggling in omnipotence (I owe nothing). Cowper’s irony exposes the hidden theology in modern boasting: every origin story needs a maker, and if you erase God, you tend to reinstall yourself.
Intent-wise, it’s less an argument than a corrective. Cowper isn’t denying effort or ambition; he’s warning that the celebration of autonomy can curdle into a moral blindness where gratitude, community, and grace are edited out of the autobiography.
Quote Details
| Topic | Sarcastic |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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