André Henri Constant van Hasselt

André Henri Constant van Hasselt
André Henri Constant van Hasselt
Born André Henri Constant van Hasselt
5 January 1806(1806-01-05)
Maastricht, Netherlands
Died 1 December 1874(1874-12-01) (aged 68)
Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, Belgium
Nationality  Belgium
Occupation poet

André Henri Constant van Hasselt (Dutch: Andries Hendrik van Hasselt ; 5 January 1806 – 1 December 1874) was a Flemish poet.

Contents

Life

Born at Maastricht, Van Hasselt was first educated in his native town. He studied his Atheneum (school for 12- to 18-year-olds) at the University of Liège (Hoogeschool van Luik), then in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, where he earned his doctor in rights. From 1827 up to 1832 he established himself as a lawyer in Maastricht. In 1833 he left Maastricht, then blockaded by the Belgian forces, and made his way to Brussels, where he became a naturalized Belgian, and was attached to the Bibliothèque de Bourgogne. In 1843 he entered the education department, and eventually became a provincial inspector of normal/elementary schools in Antwerp. Two years later he was appointed special inspector to the normal schools and kept this job until he died at Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, a suburb of Brussels, on the 1st of December 1874.[1]

Writings

His native language was Dutch, and as a French-writing poet André van Hasselt had to overcome the difficulties of writing in a language foreign to his home land. He had published a Chant héllenique in honour of Canaris in the columns of La Sentinelle des Pays-Bas as early as 1826, and other poems followed. His first volume of verse, Primeveres (1834), shows markedly the influence of Victor Hugo, which had been strengthened by a visit to Paris in 1830. His relations with Hugo became intimate in 1851-1852, when the poet was an exile in Brussels. In 1839 he became editor of the Renaissance, a paper founded to encourage the fine arts.

His chief work, the epic of the Quatre Incarnations du Christ, was published in 1867. In the same volume were printed his Études rythmiques, a series of metrical experiments designed to show that the French language could be adapted to every kind of musical rhythm. With the same end in view he executed translations of many German songs, and wrote new French libretti for the best-known operas of Mozart, Weber and others.

Legacy

A selection from his works (10 vols, Brussels, 1876–1877) was edited by MM. Charles Hen and Louis Alvin. He wrote many books for children, chiefly under the pseudonym of Alfred Avelines; and studies on historical and literary subjects. The books written in collaboration with Charles Hen are signed Charles André. A bibliography of his writings is appended to the notice by Louis Alvin in the Biographie nat. de Belgique, vol. vii.

Van Hasselt's fame has continued to increase since his death. A series of tributes to his memory are printed in the Poesies choisies (1901), edited by M. Georges Barral for the Collection des poètes français de l'etranger. This book contains a biographical and critical study by Jules Guillaume, and some valuable notes on the poet's theories of rhythm.

References

  1. ^ "Andries Hendrik van Hasselt". Digitale bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse letteren. http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/bran038biog01/bran038biog01_1750.htm. Retrieved 2006-07-12. [dead link]

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 


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