"To Foreign Climes Unknown Before/ E'en to Amerique's Distant Shore": The Mission to Establish the First Women's Convent in the Original United States, Told in Carmelite Poetry

Daniel J. Hanna
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Abstract

abstract:When Carmelite nuns from Europe crossed the Atlantic in the late eighteenth century to found the first women's convent in the original United States, they brought with them a poetic tradition that can be traced back to the founder of the reformed Carmelite order, Saint Teresa of Avila. In poems that describe their struggles in Europe to escape religious repression, their arduous ocean voyage to America, and finally the foundation of the first convent for religious women in the state of Maryland, the Carmelites who traveled from Europe to the United States both recounted their extraordinary experiences and paid homage to their spiritual mother, Teresa of Avila, who had instigated a tradition of convent poetry in sixteenth-century Spain hundreds of years earlier. These previously unstudied and unpublished poems, presented in this article for the first time, are the earliest known evidence of the spirituality and literary tradition of Teresa of Avila in the United States.
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“前往未知的外国气候/前往美国遥远的海岸”:在最初的美国建立第一个妇女修道院的使命,以加尔默罗派诗歌讲述
18世纪末,当来自欧洲的加尔默罗修女横渡大西洋,在美国建立了第一个妇女修道院时,她们带来了一种诗歌传统,这种传统可以追溯到改革后的加尔默罗修道会的创始人圣德肋撒。从欧洲来到美国的加尔默罗会修士们在诗歌中描述了她们在欧洲为逃避宗教压迫而进行的斗争,她们艰苦的海上航行到美国,最后在马里兰州为宗教妇女建立了第一所修道院。在这些诗歌中,她们讲述了她们非凡的经历,并向她们的精神母亲阿维拉的特蕾莎(Teresa of Avila)表示敬意,特蕾莎在数百年前就在16世纪的西班牙开创了修道院诗歌的传统。这些以前未被研究和发表的诗歌,在这篇文章中首次出现,是美国阿维拉的特蕾莎的灵性和文学传统的最早证据。
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