An Epitaph Upon Husband and Wife
A Song
Christ Crucified
Richard Crashaw (1613-1649) was an English poet and, like John Donne and George Herbert, he is considered one of the major metaphysical poets. Like these two poets, too, Crashaw was an Anglican priest, but he converted to Roman Catholicism despite (or perhaps because) his father (also an Anglican clergyman) was a fierce and famous Puritan polemicist against the Roman Catholic Church. Crashaw’s poetry before and after his conversion addressed mostly religious and mystical themes with a particular interest in the theme of divine love as espoused by the Catholic mystic St. Teresa of Avila, whose writings also contributed to his conversion. After his conversion, he fled in exile to France. He eventually settled in Italy and served as a Catholic priest at the Shrine of the Holy House and Shrine of Our Lady in Loreto, where he died and was buried.
An Epitaph Upon Husband and Wife
A Song
Christ Crucified
Richard Crashaw (1613-1649) was an English poet and, like John Donne and George Herbert, he is considered one of the major metaphysical poets. Like these two poets, too, Crashaw was an Anglican priest, but he converted to Roman Catholicism despite (or perhaps because) his father (also an Anglican clergyman) was a fierce and famous Puritan polemicist against the Roman Catholic Church. Crashaw’s poetry before and after his conversion addressed mostly religious and mystical themes with a particular interest in the theme of divine love as espoused by the Catholic mystic St. Teresa of Avila, whose writings also contributed to his conversion. After his conversion, he fled in exile to France. He eventually settled in Italy and served as a Catholic priest at the Shrine of the Holy House and Shrine of Our Lady in Loreto, where he died and was buried.
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