Skip to main content
Birth date
1594
Death date
1640
Birth town
London
Country
England
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 31 - 40 of 144
Title Post date Rating Comments
To His Mistress
No votes yet
0
In Praise of His Mistress
No votes yet
0
Upon the King's Sickness
No votes yet
0
To a Lady, Not Yet Enjoyed by Her Husband
No votes yet
0
Truce in Love Intreated
No votes yet
0
Grief Engrossed
No votes yet
0
A Lady, Rescued from Death by a Knight, Who in the Instant Leaves Her, Complains Thus
No votes yet
0
To A.D., Unreasonable, Distrustful of Her Own Beauty
No votes yet
0
To the Painter
No votes yet
0
The Dart
No votes yet
0
Thomas Carew was the son of a well-connected official and was educated at Merton College, Oxford and the Middle Temple in London. He worked as a diplomatic secretary in Italy, Holland and France, and soon gained a reputation as a poet.

His talent secured him a place at court, and he was privileged to serve at Charles I's table. In 1634 his masque Coelum Britannicum was performed before the King. His poems, like those of other gentlemen of the era, were not published in his own lifetime but hand-written copies were circulated among his friends. These included Ben Jonson and John Donne, who both exercised a strong influence on Carew's poetry; in his Elegy Carew proclaims Donne 'the universal monarchy of wit'. Another poet he admired greatly was the Italian Giambattista Marino, whose wit and extravagant lifestyle resembled Carew's own.

Though he never achieved the stature of Donne or Johnson, Carew was an elegant writer whose contribution to literature was typical of the stylish Cavalier school. A collected edition of his poems appeared shortly after his death.