Arthur Clifford
A Prayer to the Almighty Amid the Ruins of History
Arthur Clifford (1777-1830) was an English editor of and dealer in antique manuscripts. As one of the faculty members of the Catholic seminary known as the English College at Douai, he was imprisoned during the French Revolution. After being released, he saw many of the Catholic treasures of France’s monasteries (also purged during the revolution) emerge for public perusal. His experience in prison and love for these manuscripts inspired him to devote his life to a study and preservation of ancient manuscripts, and especially those of the Catholic Church. Among the documents he unearthed included those he found in his ancestral home of Tixall Hall, Staffordshire, England, published in two volumes, the Tixall Letters and Tixall Poetry. Within the latter volume was included the above poem by Herbert Aston (1614-1689), son of the first Lord of Tixall Hall, Sir Walter Aston (1583-1639), a convert to Catholicism during Charles I’s time, while serving as ambassador to Spain. Little else is known about Herbert Aston.
Arthur Clifford
A Prayer to the Almighty Amid the Ruins of History
Arthur Clifford (1777-1830) was an English editor of and dealer in antique manuscripts. As one of the faculty members of the Catholic seminary known as the English College at Douai, he was imprisoned during the French Revolution. After being released, he saw many of the Catholic treasures of France’s monasteries (also purged during the revolution) emerge for public perusal. His experience in prison and love for these manuscripts inspired him to devote his life to a study and preservation of ancient manuscripts, and especially those of the Catholic Church. Among the documents he unearthed included those he found in his ancestral home of Tixall Hall, Staffordshire, England, published in two volumes, the Tixall Letters and Tixall Poetry. Within the latter volume was included the above poem by Herbert Aston (1614-1689), son of the first Lord of Tixall Hall, Sir Walter Aston (1583-1639), a convert to Catholicism during Charles I’s time, while serving as ambassador to Spain. Little else is known about Herbert Aston.
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