A work by the minor PRB painter James Collinson
(1825?-1881), now best known as the man CR thought to marry, but
eventually threw off. The poem is the third part of the five-part
narrative poem titled The Child
Jesus. The work is clearly in debt to DGR's early work,
and perhaps even more to
Keble's The Christian Year and, of course, to
the liturgy of the “Joyful, Sorrowful, and Glorious Mysteries.”
“The Crowning with Thorns” is the
third of the Sorrowful Mysteries.
The subtitle of the five-part
poem, “A Record Typical of the Five Sorrowful
Mysteries,” underscores its typological methodology—taking
incidents (real and imagined) from the childhood of Jesus as
prefigurative of the consummating events of his mortal life.
This collection contains 2 texts and images, including:
Germ text
Scholarly Commentary
Introduction
A work by the minor PRB painter James Collinson (1825?-1881), now best known as the man CR thought to marry, but eventually threw off. The poem is the third part of the five-part narrative poem titled The Child Jesus. The work is clearly in debt to DGR's early work, and perhaps even more to Keble's The Christian Year and, of course, to the liturgy of the “Joyful, Sorrowful, and Glorious Mysteries.” “The Crowning with Thorns” is the third of the Sorrowful Mysteries. The subtitle of the five-part poem, “A Record Typical of the Five Sorrowful Mysteries,” underscores its typological methodology—taking incidents (real and imagined) from the childhood of Jesus as prefigurative of the consummating events of his mortal life.
Printing History
First printed in The Germ 2, pages 54-55.