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Poems. By Thomas Carew, Esquire is a collection of lyrics, songs, pastorals, poetic dialogues, elegies, addresses, and occasional poems. Most of the pieces are fairly short—the longest, "A Rapture," is 166 lines, and well over half are under 50 lines. The subjects are various: a number of poems treat love, lovemaking, and feminine beauty.
Sir Thomas Carew (1624 – 25 July 1681) was an English lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1659 and 1681. Carew was the third surviving son of Sir Richard Carew, 1st Baronet , of Antony, Cornwall and his second wife Grace Rolle, daughter of Robert Rolle of Heanton Satchville , Petrockstowe , Devon.
Thomas J. Carew, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at New York University, is an American neuroscientist whose interests center on the behavioral, cellular, and molecular analyses of learning and memory. His work provides provide empirical support for the idea that different temporal phases of memory consolidation can be best identified ...
On an unknown date she married Sir Wymond Carew of Antony, Cornwall, by whom she had 16 or 19 children (varying sources), an unknown number of whom survived to adulthood, including: Thomas Carew (1527 – 12 February 1565) Roger Carew; George Carew; John Carew; Sir Matthew Carew (1531–1618), lawyer; married Alice Rivers, by whom he had issue ...
Thomas Carew (1526/7–12 February 1565) was an English lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1555 and 1565. Biography Carew ...
Inscribed Purbeck marble ledger stone on chest tomb of Sir Henry Carew, 7th Baronet, Haccombe Church. He died on 31 October 1830 and was buried in the family vault beneath St Blaise's Church, Haccombe, next to Haccombe House, which church was a peculiar of the Archbishop of Canterbury and was served by an archpriest who was not subject to the authority of the Bishop of Exeter [10] as were all ...
Thomas Carew was another son, and Carew managed to find him a place with Sir Dudley Carleton. [2] He was buried at St. Dunstan's-in-the-West on 2 August 1618, his career being described in a memorial tablet in the church, and his name being kept in remembrance by a bequest for the poor of the parish.
Thomas Carue (alias O Corrain) of Mobernan appears in the Dictionary of National Biography [21] His brother, Sir Ross Carey, appears on the 1661 memorial of Anne Hyde, his wife, in Westminster Abbey. [22] Carve, however, in his Lyra sive anacephalaeosis Hibernica claims that the usage of Carran for his family name is incorrect. He says "Prater ...