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         Crashaw Richard:     more books (100)
  1. Richard Crashaw: a study in baroque sensibility by Austin Warren, 1939
  2. The Religious Poems of Richard Crashaw by Richard Crashaw, 2010-01-10
  3. Complete Poetry of Richard Crashaw (The Norton Library Seventeenth-Century Series, N728) by Richard Crashaw, 1974-06
  4. The Religious Poems of Richard Crashaw by R. A. ERIC SHEPERD, 2009-12-24
  5. The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw by Richard Crashaw, William Barclay Turnbull, 2010-01-01
  6. Richard Crashaw;: A study in style and poetic development by Ruth C Wallerstein, 1972
  7. The English Poems of Richard Crashaw by Richard Crashaw, 2010-02-23
  8. The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume 1 by Richard Crashaw, 2010-01-12
  9. The Poems English Latin and Greek of Richard Crashaw by Richard; Martin, L. C. (editor) Crashaw, 1966
  10. The Complete Works Of Richard Crashaw V1: For The First Time Collected And Collated With The Original And Early Editions (1872) by Richard Crashaw, 2010-09-10
  11. Richard Crashaw (Medieval and Renaissance Authors, V. 8) by Thomas F. Healy, 1986-06
  12. Richard Crashaw (Twayne's English Authors Series, 299) by Paul A Parrish, 1980
  13. Essay on the Art of Richard Crashaw (Renaissance Studies) by Robert M. Cooper, 1982
  14. Poems of Richard Crashaw by Richard Crashaw, 2009-12-23

1. Richard Crashaw --  Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Britannica online encyclopedia article on Richard Crashaw English poet known for religious verse of vibrant stylistic ornamentation and ardent faith.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9026771/Richard-Crashaw
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Richard Crashaw
Page 1 of 1 born c. 1613, London, Eng.
died Aug. 21, 1649, Loreto, Papal States [Italy] English poet known for religious verse of vibrant stylistic ornamentation and ardent faith. The son of a zealous, learned Puritan minister, Crashaw was educated at the University of Cambridge. In 1634, the year of his graduation, he published Epigrammatum Sacrorum Liber Crashaw, Richard... (75 of 378 words) To read the full article, activate your FREE Trial Commonly Asked Questions About Richard Crashaw Close Enable free complete viewings of Britannica premium articles when linked from your website or blog-post.

2. Richard Crashaw - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Born in London, Richard Crashaw was the son of a strongly antiCatholic divine, Dr William Crashaw (1572-1626), who distinguished himself, even in those
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Crashaw
Richard Crashaw
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Richard Crashaw (c. August 25 English poet , styled "the divine," was part of the Seventeenth-century Metaphysical School of poets
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Born in London , Richard Crashaw was the son of a strongly anti-Catholic divine, Dr William Crashaw (1572-1626), who distinguished himself, even in those times, by the excessive acerbity of his writings against the Catholics . In spite of these opinions, however, he was attracted by Catholic devotion, for he translated several Latin hymns of the Jesuits . Richard Crashaw was originally put to school at Charterhouse , but in July 1631 he was admitted to Pembroke College, Cambridge , where he took the degree of B.A. in 1634. The publication of Herbert's Temple in seems to have finally determined the bias of his genius in favour of religious poetry, and next year he published his first book, Epigrammatum sacrorum liber , a volume of Latin verses. In March he removed to Peterhouse, was made a fellow of that college in 1637, and proceeded to take his M.A. in 1638. It was about this time that he made the acquaintance and secured the lasting friendship of Abraham Cowley. He was also on terms of intimacy with Nicholas Ferrar , and frequently visited him at his house at Little Gidding. In 1641 he is said to have gone to Oxford, but only for a short time; for when in 1643 Cowley left Cambridge to seek a refuge at Oxford, Crashaw remained behind, and was forcibly ejected from his fellowship in 1644. In the confusion of the

3. Crashaw Richard Books. Read Classics Literature Book Online.More That 4500 Short
crashaw richard Books.Read classics literature book online.More that 4500 short stories, aesop fable, love poem, american and english literature in our
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Wishes To his (supposed) Mistress - Richard Crashaw Number of pages: 2 Number of views: 10

4. Richard Crashaw
Richard Crashaw was the son of a staunch Puritan preacher. He was educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge from where he graduated in 1634 going on to become
http://www.englishverse.com/poets/crashaw_richard
Richard Crashaw (c.1612-1649)
Richard Crashaw was the son of a staunch Puritan preacher. He was educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge from where he graduated in 1634 going on to become a fellow of Peterhouse. After the English Civil War he became a Roman Catholic and left England for France. Introduced to the French Queen, Henrietta Maria, by his friend Abraham Cowley, another ex-Cambridge fellow who was working as her secretary, he was helped by her to obtain a position at Loreto Cathedral in Italy, where he died in 1649. Crashaw's principal poetic work was the Steps to the Temple , a collection of religious poems published in 1646. Attached to this was a non-religious section entitled Delights of the Muses , which contains his best-known poem Wishes to his Supposed Mistress . After his death his friend, Miles Pinkney, published a more complete volume of his works, Carmen Deo Nostro Wishes to His Supposed Mistress
The Weeper

A Hymn to the Name and Honour of the Admirable Saint Teresa

Upon the Book and Picture of the Seraphical Saint Teresa
...
Four Metaphysical Poets: George Herbert, Richard Crashaw, Henry Vaughan and Andrew Marvell

A.F. Allison (Editor)
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5. Richard Crashaw Quotes - Find A Crashaw Quote
Richard Crashaw Quotes and Crashaw Quotations. Related Content. Encyclopedia. Crashaw, Richard (The Oxford Companion to English Literature)
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Famous Quotes by Richard Crashaw
  • To these, whom Death again did wed, This grave’s the second Marriage-bed. More (Pillow hard, and sheets not warm) Love made the bed; they’ll take no harm. More We saw Thee in Thy balmy nest, Young Dawn of our Eternal Day! We saw Thine eyes break... More Welcome, all wonders in one night! Eternity shut in a span, Summer in winter, day in... More Runs to and fro, complaining his sweet cares Because those pretious mysteries that... More And now where e’re he strayes Among the Galilaean mountains, Or more unwelcome... More Every Morne from hence, A brisk Cherub something sips, Whose sacred influence Adds... More O thou undaunted daughter of desires! By all thy dower of lights and fires; By all the... More Go, smiling souls, your new-built cages break, In heaven you’ll learn to sing, ere here to... More What heaven-entreated heart is this Stands trembling at the gate of bliss;

6. CRASHAW RICHARD Term Papers, Research Papers On CRASHAW RICHARD, Essays On CRASH
100 College Term Papers, Research Papers, Essays and Book Reports.
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Term Paper # 62784 SHOPPING CART DISABLED Richard the Lionheart
An analysis of the life of King Richard the Lionheart.
2,739 words ( approx. 11.0 pages ), 24 sources, MLA, $ 81.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that the figure Robin Hood is based on a real person, a king of England to be precise. The paper claims that an examination of the life of King Richard, better known as Richard the Lionheart,will reveal the real tale of Robin Hood. The paper presents a biographical tale of the life of King Richard. The paper contends that it is Richard's positive traits and goals that people remember about him; it is his virtue and heroism that lives in storybooks. Though the fairytale has changed and gained an element of fiction, the paper explains that the truth of Richard's conquest is evident.
From the Paper
"Most people remember the character of Robin Hood from children's stories. When they think of him they recall a hero who "robbed from the rich and gave to the poor." What most people do not know is that the figure Robin Hood is based on a real person, a king of England to be precise. That character is King Richard I, better known as King Richard the Lionheart. Although Richard I did not, by the standards of the day, steal from "the Rich," historians have found a distinct connection between the lives of the two characters. Robin Hood lived during the 13th century, exactly one year after the time of King Richard's reign. Also, it is evident in the stories of Robin Hood that his main political goal is to "restore Richard to the throne after Prince John usurped it." Although most people are probably unaware of the connection between the two heroes, King Richard I had a very fascinating and interesting life. "

7. Richard Crashaw Quotes - Quote Cosmos
Famous quotes. Quotes for Crashaw, Richard Quote Cosmos.
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I would be married, but I'd have no wife, I would be married to a single life.
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8. Richard Crashaw
Richard Crashaw, Steps to the Temple, The Delights of the Muses (1646) and Carmen Deo Nostro (1652). Genre devotional poetry, experimenting with
http://faculty.goucher.edu/eng211/richard_crashaw.htm
Richard Crashaw, Steps to the Temple The Delights of the Muses (1646) and Carmen Deo Nostro Genre: devotional poetry, experimenting with metaphysical imagery borrowed from the continental tradition of the religious mystics (esp. St. Teresa of Avila) and from visual art forms associated with Catholic celebrations of saints' sufferings and mystics' visions. Form: mainly tetrameter couplets, with some metrical experiments in alternating tetrameter and dimeter ("Infant Martyrs"). Characters: saints and innocents, Jesus and the angels. Summary: Crashaw is the foremost exponent of the style that critics now call (after W. Sypher, 1955) the Baroque [from the French for an irregularly shaped pearl, perhaps from the Arabic ( buraq ) for stony or pebbled ground]. Baroque style resolves the agonized conflicts of Mannerism, which we see in the metaphysical conceits of Donne, Herbert, and some Herrick. Those poets created exotic and self-consciously inappropriate metaphors (lover-Beloved are like the feet of the navigator's compass, in Donne's "Validiction: Forbidding Mourning") to lure the reader into a felt appreciation of their emotional distress beyond the immediate stimulus of the poem's situation (they're parting for a while, but their grief makes his language search for near impossible comparisons). T.S. Eliot, in his essay on Shakespeare's Hamlet , said such poetic overstatement (in Hamlet's case, his response to the situation of the play) lacks an "objective correlative" or sufficient motive in the context to warrant the bizarre poetic response (Sypher 192). The baroque poet, like Crashaw or Milton (in

9. Richard Crashaw
Richard Crashaw Biography Thousands of poems to browse or send to a friend or love. Submit your own! Unique Greeting Cards, forums, links, marketing,
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Richard Crashaw
Richard was the only son of William Crashaw, a puritan preacher in London who had officiated at the burning of Mary, Queen of Scots. In defiance of his father's views on religion, Crashaw went to a High Church college at Cambridge, Pembroke. He later became a fellow of Peterhouse College but was forced to resign because of his Roman Catholic leanings.
Victory for Oliver Cromwell's Puritans in the Civil War made England a dangerous place for Catholic sympathisers like Crashaw, and in 1644 he fled to France. He became a Catholic sometime around 1645. His friend Abraham Cowley found him living in poverty in Paris, and introduced him to Charles I's Queen, Henrietta Maria. She sent Crashaw to Rome with a recommendation to the Pope. On his arrival in Italy however, Crashaw was simply allotted a position in a cardinal's household. Four months before he died, he was made a sub-canon of the Cathedral of Santa Casa in Loreto.
Crashaw was much influenced by the Italian poet Marino, as well as his reading of the Italian and Spanish mystics. Though his verse is somewhat uneven in quality, at its best it is characterised by brilliant use of extravagant baroque imagery.

10. JSTOR Documents Sir Francis Wyatt, Governor, 1621-1626
Hundred Richard Biggs Chaplaines choise l Ensigne Isaack Chaplaine and Jordans Harris Thomas Marlott Rawleigh crashaw richard Bigges Jabez Whitakers
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11. Richard Crashaw - Poems, Biography, Quotes
Free collection of all Richard Crashaw Poems and Biography. See the best poems and poetry by Richard Crashaw.
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12. The Works Of Richard Crashaw
The Works of richard crashaw line. Steps to the Temple (1646) * The Weeper * The Weeper DIVINE EPIGRAMS — * On the Water of our Lord s Baptism
http://www.luminarium.org/sevenlit/crashaw/crashbib.htm
Steps to the Temple (1646)
The Weeper

The Weeper

D IVINE E PIGRAMS
On the Water of our Lord's Baptism

On the Baptized Ethiopian

On the Miracle of multiplied Loaves

On the Sepulchre of our Lord
...
A Hymn to the Name and Honour of the Admirable Saint Teresa

The Delights of the Muses
Music's Duel
An Epitaph upon Husband and Wife Upon Ford's Two Tragedies On Marriage ... Wishes to his supposed Mistress Carmen Deo Nostro (1652) The Flaming Heart Upon the Book and Picture of Saint Teresa Christ Crucified Other Song Crashaw Life Works ... 17th C. Eng. Lit. to Richard Crashaw Site created by Anniina Jokinen on March 15, 1998. Last updated on June 1, 2006. . All Rights Reserved. Used with express written permission.

13. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Richard Crashaw
GILFILLAN, The Life and Poetry of richard crashaw, a biographical essay prefixed to his edition of the poems (Edinburgh, 1857); FULLER, Worthies Library,
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04467a.htm
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Richard Crashaw
Poet, Cambridge scholar and convert ; d. 1649. The date of his birth is uncertain. All that can be affirmed positively is that he was the only child of a one-time famous Puritan divine, William Crashaw, by a first marriage, and that he was born in London , probably not earlier than the year 1613. Of the mother nothing is known except that she died in her child's infancy, while his father was one of the preachers in the Temple ; and not even her family name has been preserved to us. William Crashaw, the father, was born in Yorkshire of a prosperous stock, which had been settled for some generations in or about Handsworth, a place some few miles to the east of the present town of Sheffield. He was a man of unchallenged repute for learning in his day, an argumentative but eloquent preacher, strong in his Protestantism , and fierce in his denunciation of "Romish falsifications" and "besotted Jesuitries". He married a second time in 1619, and was once more made a widower in the following year. Richard, the future poet, could scarcely have been more than a child of six when this event took place; but the relations between the boy and his step-mother, brief as they must have been, were affectionate to an unusual degree. She was but four and twenty when she died in child-birth early in October, 1620, and she was

14. Richard Crashaw - Research And Read Books, Journals, Articles At
Research richard crashaw at the Questia.com online library.
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15. Richard Crashaw — Infoplease.com
crashaw, richard (kr sh ô) key, 1612?–1649, one of the English metaphysical poets. He was graduated from Cambridge in 1634 and remained there as a fellow
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    Crashaw, Richard
    Crashaw, Richard key , one of the English metaphysical poets . He was graduated from Cambridge in 1634 and remained there as a fellow at Peterhouse until the Puritan uprising, when he fled to the Continent (1643). Though he was the son of an ardent Puritan clergyman, by 1646 he had converted to Roman Catholicism. He served for several years as an attendant to Cardinal Palotto, who finally procured him a minor post at the shrine of Loreto, Italy, in Apr., 1649. Four months later Crashaw died of a fever. Although he wrote secular poetry in Latin and Greek as well as English, his fame rests on his intense religious poetry. His strange mixture of sensuality and mysticism is unusual in English literature and has been compared to the baroque art of Italy and Spain. The principal volume of his work is

16. Poet: Richard Crashaw - All Poems Of Richard Crashaw
Poet richard crashaw All poems of richard crashaw .. poetry.
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To download the eBook right-Click on the title and select "Save Target As". Biography Poems Quotations Comments ... Stats Richard was the only son of William Crashaw, a puritan preacher in London who had officiated at the burning of Mary, Queen of Scots. In defiance of his father's views on religion, Crashaw went to a High Church college at Cambridge, Pembroke. He later became a fellow of Peterhouse College but was for .. .. more >>
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Page: A Hymn to the Name and Honour of the Admirable Saint Teresa A Song An Epitaph upon Husband and Wife An Epitaph upon Husband and Wife Who died and were buried together ... Verses from the Shepherds' Hymn Page:
Quotations "To these, whom Death again did wed,
This grave's the second Marriage-bed."

17. RICHARD CRASHAW (1613-... - Online Information Article About RICHARD CRASHAW (16
richard crashaw (1613 - Online Information article about richard crashaw (1613-
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RICHARD CRASHAW (1613-165o)
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Spread the word: del.icio.us it! See also: RICHARD See also: CRASHAW See also: English poet, styled " the divine," was See also: born in See also: London about 1613 . He was the son of a strongly See also: anti -papistical divine, Dr See also: William See also: Crashaw (1572-1626), who distinguished himself, even in those times, by the excessive acerbity of his writings against the Catholics . In spite of these opinions, however, he was attracted by See also:

18. 15322. Crashaw, Richard. The Columbia World Of Quotations. 1996
15322. crashaw, richard. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996.
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19. Crashaw, Richard (Harper's Magazine)
THINGS CONNECTED TO “crashaw, richard”. HUMAN BEINGS. Carew, Thomas Charles I, King of England Drummond, William (William J.) Habington, William
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20. Crashaw, Richard (Nuttall Encyclopædia)
crashaw, richard, a minor poet, born in London; bred for the English Church; went to Paris, where he became a Roman Catholic; fell into pecuniary
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1907 Nuttall Encyclop¦dia of General Knowledge C · Crashaw, Richard a b c d ... z
Crashaw, Richard (
Crashaw, Richard , a minor poet, born in London ; bred for the English Church; went to Paris , where he became a Roman Catholic; fell into pecuniary difficulties, but was befriended by Cowley and recommended to a post; was an imitator of George Herbert , and his poems were of the same class, but more fantastical; his principal poems were “Steps to the Temple ” and the “Delights of the Muses ”; both Milton and Pope are indebted to him ( Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclop¦dia , edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907) Crapaud, Jean Crassus, Lucius Licinius Web fromoldbooks.org Craik, George Little Craik, Mrs. Crail Cramer, Johann Baptist ... Crapaud, Jean Crashaw, Richard Crassus, Lucius Licinius Crassus, Marcus Licinius Crates Cratinus ... Crayer, Caspar de

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