Antonio Enríquez Gómez

1600–1663

Antonio Enríquez Gómez was born in Cuenca, Castile, and in his midthirties he settled in France. His father was a New Christian. Gómez published books of Spanish poetry and prose in Rouen, Bordeaux, and Paris. In addition to his published works, he left two long poems, in which he expressed explicit identification with Judaism. He returned to Spain in 1649, apparently because of the commercial business in which he was involved, living there under the name Fernando de Zárate. In 1660, the Inquisition sentenced him in absentia and burnt him in effigy in Seville. Shortly afterward, Gómez himself was arrested and died in an Inquisition prison while awaiting his verdict.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

Primary Source

Dialogue of Adam and Eve

Public Access
Text
Beautiful mistress mine, upon whose snow at dawn the rose is forming on fields of mother of pearl. Pure and lovely lily, who amid coral protects itself from the pure crystals that the…