"You thought perhaps when learned Campion dies,His pen must cease, his sugared tongue be still;But you forgot how loud his death it criesHow far beyond the sound of tongue and quill."
In 1581, a young Englishman named Henry Walpole attended the execution of the Jesuit Edmund Campion. As Campion was hung, drawn and quartered, Walpole stood close enough to be spattered with his holy blood. Though Campion’s fame in England was already great, Walpole would amplify it further with a splendid, lengthy poem, which became enormously popular among English Catholics—so popular that the man who printed the book had his ears cut off as punishment.
In his poem Walpole wrote: We cannot fear a mortal torment, we,This martyr’s blood hath moistened all our hearts,Whose parted quarters when we chance to seeWe learn to play the constant Christian’s parts.
This was more than wordplay: Two years after Campion’s death, Walpole became a priest, and was himself hung for the faith in 1595. Links
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