CRASHAW, RICHARD

(c.1613–August 25, 1649), was an English Metaphysical poet, known for using striking figures of speech. He associated with John Donne, and was a contemporary of both John Bunyan and John Milton. At first an Anglican in the High Church, he converted to Catholicism and died as canon of the Santa Casa Cathedral at Loreto. Many of his great poems are contained in Carmen Deo Nostra, 1652.

In his Hymn of the Nativity, 1652, Richard Crashaw wrote:

Poor world (said I) what wilt thou do

To entertain this starry stranger?

Is this the best thou canst bestow?

A cold, and not too cleanly, manger?

Contend, ye powers of heav’n and earth,

To fit a bed for this huge birth.263