POEMS ON RICHARD CRASHAW: Car, Thomas. The Anagram: He was Car. Cowley, Abraham. On the death of Mr. Crashaw. Wilmott, R. E. A. A Dream of the Poets. Alexander, Bishop. Crashaw's Poems (Three Sonnets). Anderson, G. F. Reynolds. The White Book of the Muses. Richard Crashaw, p. 45. TRANSLATORS OF CRASHAW'S LATIN AND GREEK POEMS: To the Name above every name. Upon Easter Day. The Hymn: O Gloriosa Domina. S. Mary Magdalene; or, The Weeper. A Song of Divine Love. Psalm cxxxvII. Hymn to S. Teresa. Apology for same. The Flaming Heart. Concluding sixteen lines. Description of a Religious House and Condition of Life. Dies irae, dies illa. Answer for Hope. Divine Epigrams: "Two went up into the Temple to pray." The Widow's Mites. On the Prodigal. "It is better to go into Heaven with one eye." "But now they have seen and hated.” On the Blessed Virgin's Bashfulness. To our Lord, upon the Water made Wine. "I am ready not only to be bound." Music's Duel. To the Morning. On a Foul Morning. Wishes to his Supposed Mistress. Love's Horoscope. An Epitaph upon Mr. Ashton. Upon the Death of the most desired Mr. Herrys. An Epitaph upon a Young Married Couple. Death's Lecture and the Funeral of a Young Gentleman. Temperance. Of the Cheap Physician. A Song: Out of the Italian ("To thy lover "). Out of Catullus ("Come and let us live"). Cupid's Crier (Out of the Greek). Epigram: Upon Ford's Two Tragedies. ORIGINALS OF SOME OF CRASHAW'S TRANSLATIONS: Sospetto d'Herode. From the Italian Poet Marino's "Strage degli Innocenti," Book i. Dies irae, dies illa. From the Latin Hymn. Description of a Religious House. From the Latin of Barclay's Argenis, in Lib. v., Cap. 9. Music's Duel. From the Latin of Strada's Prolusiones. In the Praise of the Spring. From the Latin of Virgil's Georg. ii., 323-345. The Beginning of Heliodorus. From the Greek prose of Heliodorus' Ethiopica, Lib. i., Cap. 1. Cupid's Crier. From the Greek of Moschus' first Idyll. Out of Catullus: "Come and let us live, my dear." the Latin of Catullus' Carm. v. = 2. From Alexias. From the Latin of Francis Remond. From Petronius ("The bird that's fetch'd.") Petronius' Satyricon, Cap. 93 From From Horace ("Shame of my mother soil.") From the Latin of Horace: Odes, II., xiii. ANTHOLOGIES REPRESENTATIVE OF CRASHAW: Sacred Epigrams Englished. London, 1682. Ellis, G. Specimens of the Early English Poets, 3 vols., 1801. Crashaw, vol. iii., pp. 197-201. Headley, H. Select Beauties of Ancient English Poetry. 2 vols., 1810. Crashaw, p. xxxvi., pp. 130-149. Cattermole, R. Sacred Poetry of the Seventeenth Century. 2 vols., 1836. Crashaw, vol. i., pp. 331-349; vol. ii., pp. 221-243. Gems of Sacred Poetry. 2 vols., London, 1841. Cra shaw, vol. i., pp. 200-213. Campbell, Thos. Specimens of the British Poets, 1841. Crashaw, pp. 198-200. Trench, R. C. Household Book of English Poetry, 1868. Crashaw, p. 135. Emerson, R. W. Parnassus, 1874. poems by Crashaw. Contains two short Ward, T. H. English Poets. 4 vols. G. A. Simcox, vol. ii., pp. 206-209. Crashaw, by Corser, Rev. Thomas. Collectanea Anglo-Poetica. 10 parts, 1860-80. R. Crashaw, part iv., 1869, pp. 508-520. Palgrave, F. T. Golden Treasury of Songs and Lyrics. 1861, pp. 66-68. Morley, Henry. Cassell's Library of English Literature. Illustrations of English Religion. Crashaw, pp. 278, 279. Morley, Henry.. Cassell's Library of English Literature. Shorter English Poems. Crashaw, pp. 296-297. Linton, W. J. Rare Poems of Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries mdccclxxxiii. Crashaw, pp. 124-128. Palgrave, F. T. Treasury of Sacred Song, 1889. Cra shaw, pp. 111-113. The Magazine of Poetry. (Buffalo, N.Y.) Vol. i., 1889. Crashaw, pp. 91-94. Watson, W. Lyric Love: an Anthology, 1892. Cra shaw, p. 170. Locker-Lampson, F. Lyra Elegantiarum, 1892. Crashaw, cciv. Shipley, Orby. Carmina Mariana, 1893. Richard Crashaw, pp. 113-118. Dircks, W. H. Cavalier and Courtier Lyrists, N.D. Crashaw, pp. 87-93. Saintsbury, Geo. E. B. Seventeenth Century Lyrics, 1893. Crashaw, pp. 237-239, 243-249. Beeching, H. C. Lyra Sacra, 1895. Crashaw, pp. 109-124. |