Franciszek Karpiński (born Oct. 4, 1741, Hołosków, Kingdom of Poland—died Sept. 16, 1825, Chorowszczyźna, near Grodno, Russian Empire [now Hrodna, Belarus]) was a Polish Enlightenment lyric poet who is best known for his religious and patriotic verses.
Karpiński attended a Jesuit school, where he received a traditional education. He served as a court poet for the princely Czartoryski family until he retired to his family farm. Some of his verse was set to music, including many of his simple morning and evening prayers. His celebrated, much-sung Christmas carol Bóg się rodzi (“God is Born”) was the first of its type to be written in Polish. He is also known for the secular pastoral ballad Laura i Filon (“Laura and Filon”) and the patriotic poem Żale Sarmaty nad grobem Zygmunta Augusta (1797; “A Sarmatian’s Lament at the Tomb of Sigismund Augustus”), in which he mourns the partition of Poland in 1795. He wrote Pamiętniki, his memoirs, after his retirement.