- Émile Cammaerts
Émile Leon Cammaerts (
March 16 ,1878 inBrussels ,Belgium –November 2 ,1953 inRadlett ,Hertfordshire ,England ) was a Belgianpoet .Cammaerts moved to England in 1908. Aside from his own writings, he engaged in translations of
John Ruskin andG. K. Chesterton . His most important work was his 1935 biography of King Albert. He became Professor of Belgian Studies at theUniversity of London in 1933, and his papers are held there inSenate House Library .He married the theatrical actress
Tita Brand (daughter of the singerMarie Brema ), with whom he had six children, one of themFrancis Cammaerts .Works
* "Belgian Poems : Chants patriotique, et autres poems" (translated into English by his wife in 1916)
* "Carillon", recitation, with music byElgar : at the first performance the poem was read by Tita Brand, Cammaerts' wife (1914)
* "Une voix dans le désert ", recitation, with music byElgar (1915)
* "Le drapeau belge ", recitation, with music byElgar (1917)
* "Through the iron bars, two years of German occupation in Belgium" (1917)
* "A history of Belgium from the Roman invasion to the present day" (1921)
* "Discoveries in England" (1930)
* "Albert of Belgium, defender of right", a biography of KingAlbert I of Belgium (1935)
* "The laughing prophet" (Study ofG. K. Chesterton - 1937)
* "Upon this rock" (1943)
* "The flower of grass" (1945)
* "The peace that is left" (1945)
* "The Cloud and the Silver Lining (Christian contributions to the BBC Silver Lining Radio programme -1952)External links
* [http://archives.ulrls.lon.ac.uk/dispatcher.aspx?action=search&database=ChoiceArchive&search=IN=MS800 Catalogue of Émile Cammaerts' papers]
*gutenberg author|id=Cammaerts+Emile|name=Émile Cammaerts
* [http://www.famousbelgians.net/cammaerts.htm Émile Leon Cammaerts]
* [http://hdl.handle.net/1802/1098 "Carillon": monologue with music, poem by Émile Cammaerts and music by Elgar] Score from Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
* [http://hdl.handle.net/1802/1099 "Une voix dans le désert": monologue with music, poem by Émile Cammaerts and music by Elgar] Score from Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
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