Richard Crashaw

Richard Crashaw

Infobox Writer
name = Richard Crashaw
birthdate = c. 1613
birthplace = London, England
deathdate = 25 August 1649
deathplace = Loretto
occupation = Poet
nationality = British
alma_mater = Peterhouse, Cambridge

Richard Crashaw (c. 1613 - 25 August 1649), English poet, styled "the divine," was part of the Seventeenth-century Metaphysical School of poets.

Life

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 1633 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 1636 he removed to Peterhouse, was made a fellow of that college in 1637, and proceeded to take his M.A. in 1638. He served as the priest for the Church of St Mary the Less, Cambridge from 1638 to 1643. 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 civil wars he escaped to France, where he finally embraced the Catholic faith, towards which he had long been tending.

During his exile his religious and secular poems were collected by an anonymous friend, and published under the title of "Steps to the Temple" and "The Delights of the Muses", in one volume, in 1646. The first part includes the hymn to St Teresa and the version of Marini's "Sospetto d'Herode". This same year Cowley found him in great destitution at Paris, and induced Queen Henrietta Maria to extend towards him what influence she still possessed. At her introduction he proceeded to Italy, where he became attendant to Cardinal Giovanni Battista Maria Pallotta at Rome and stayed at the famous Venerable English College. In 1648 he published two Latin hymns at Paris.

He remained until 1649 in the service of the cardinal, to whom he had a great personal attachment; but his retinue contained persons whose violent and licentious behaviour was a source of ceaseless vexation to the sensitive English mystic. At last his denunciation of their excesses became so public that the animosity of those persons was excited against him, and in order to shield him from their revenge he was sent by the cardinal in 1649 to Loreto, where he was made a canon of the Holy House. In less than three weeks, however, he sickened of fever and died, not without grave suspicion of having been poisoned. He was buried in the Lady chapel at Loretto. A collection of his religious poems, entitled "Carmen Deo nostro", was brought out in Paris in 1652, dedicated at the dead poet's desire to the faithful friend of his sufferings, the countess of Denbigh. The book is illustrated by thirteen engravings after Crashaw's own designs.

Works

Crashaw excelled in all manner of graceful accomplishments; besides being an excellent Latinist and Hellenist, he had an intimate knowledge of Italian and Spanish; and his skill in music, painting and engraving was no less admired in his lifetime than his skill in poetry. Cowley memorialized him in an elegy that ranks among the very finest in our language, in which he, a Protestant, well expressed the feeling left on the minds of contemporaries by the character of the young Catholic poet:

:"His faith, perhaps, in some nice tenets might:Be wrong; his life, I'm sure, was in the right::And I, myself, a Catholic will be,:So far at least, dear saint, to pray to thee"

The poetry of Crashaw will be best appreciated by those who can with most success free themselves from the bondage of a traditional sense of the dignity of language. The custom of his age permitted the use of images and phrases which we now condemn as incongruous and unseemly, and the fervent fancy of Crashaw carried this licence to excess. At the same time his verse is studded with fiery beauties and sudden felicities of language, unsurpassed by any lyricist between his own time and Shelley's.

There is no religious poetry in English so full at once of gross and awkward images and imaginative touches of the most ethereal beauty. The temper of his intellect seems to have been delicate and weak, fiery and uncertain; he has a morbid, almost hysterical, passion about him, even when his ardour is most exquisitely expressed, and his adoring addresses to the saints have an effeminate falsetto that makes their ecstasy almost repulsive. The faults and beauties of his very peculiar style can be studied nowhere to more advantage than in the "Hymn to Saint Teresa".

Among the secular poems of Crashaw the best are "Music's Duel", which deals with that strife between the musician and the nightingale which has inspired so many poets, and "Wishes to his supposed Mistress". In his latest sacred poems, included in the "Carmen Deo nostro", sudden and eminent beauties are not wanting, but the mysticism has become more pronounced, and the ecclesiastical mannerism more harsh and repellent. The themes of Crashaw's verses are as distinct as possible from those of Shelley's, but it may, on the whole, be said that at his best moments he reminds the reader more closely of the author of "Epipsychidion" than of any earlier or later poet.

Crashaw's works were first collected, in one volume, in 1858 by William Barclay Turnbull. In 1872 an edition, in 2 volumes, was printed for private subscription by the Rev. AB Grosart. A complete edition was edited (1904) for the Cambridge University Press as "Richard Crashaw: Steps To The Temple Delights of The Muses And Other Poems" by A. R. Waller. Crashaw's works are now available online.

Crashaw's Latin poem "Bulla" ("Bubble") served as the inspiration for Elliott Carter's large orchestral work "Symphonia: sum fluxae pretium spei". His poem "Lo, the Full, Final Sacrifice" was set to music by the English composer Gerald Finzi.

References

*1911


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Richard Crashaw —     Richard Crashaw     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► 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 …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Richard Crashaw — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Richard Crashaw (Londres, hacia 1613 Loreto, 25 de agosto de 1649), fue un poeta barroco inglés, llamado el divino , que formó parte del grupo de poetas metafísicos del siglo XVII. Su obra poética está inspirada por… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Richard Crashaw — (* 1613 in London; † 25. August 1649 in Loreto, Italien) war ein englischer Dichter. Leben Richard Crashaw wurde in London als Sohn eines puritanischen Geistlichen geboren und studierte an der Universität Cambridge. 1644 verließ er England, trat… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Richard Crashaw — Tristeza Nada expresa mejor nuestra aflicción que el no decir nada …   Diccionario de citas

  • Richard Lovelace — Richard Lovelace. For the MP and peer Richard Lovelace, Lord Lovelace of Hurley, Berks, see Richard Lovelace, 1st Baron Lovelace. Richard Lovelace (1618–1657) was an English poet in the seventeenth century. He was a cavalier poet who fought on… …   Wikipedia

  • Crashaw, Richard — ▪ British poet 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,… …   Universalium

  • Crashaw, Richard — (?1613 1649)    His father, William, was one of the Puritan clergymen officiating at the execution of Mary Queen of Scots in 1587. Orphaned from the age of fourteen, Richard was educated at Charterhouse School and Pembroke College, Cambridge, and …   British and Irish poets

  • CRASHAW (R.) — CRASHAW RICHARD (1612 ou 1613 1649) Fils d’un puritain passionné, Crashaw commença à étudier la rhétorique et l’art poétique à la Chartreuse de Londres. Selon Lloyd, son premier biographe (Mémoires , 1668), Robert Brook, directeur de la… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Crashaw, Richard — • Biographical article on the poet Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006 …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Crashaw — (spr. kräschao), Richard, engl. Dichter, geb. um 1613 in London als Sohn eines strengen Puritaners, gest. 1649 in Loreto, wurde im Charterhouse erzogen, studierte in Cambridge, namentlich alte Sprachen, Spanisch und Italienisch, musizierte, malte …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”