Cammaerts translated three books by art, history and landscape expert John Ruskin[n 2] and selected G. K. Chesterton Father Brown detective stories in La clairvoyance du père Brown.[n 3]
Cammaerts is the author of a famous quotation (often mistakenly attributed to G. K. Chesterton) in his study on Chesterton:
When men choose not to believe in God, they do not thereafter believe in nothing. They then become capable of believing in anything.[2]
Personal life
Cammaerts was born in Saint-Gilles, a suburb of Brussels.[n 4] He was educated at the University of Brussels and later at the experimental Université Nouvelle where he studied geography. He migrated to England in 1908 and was baptised as an Anglican at age 34 (c. 1912) henceforth taking the middle name Pieter.[1]
He married the Shakespearian actress Helen Tita Braun, known as Tita Brand (daughter of opera singer Marie Brema), with whom he had six children, including Pieter Cammaerts, who was killed while serving in the Royal Air Force during World War II, prominent SOE operative Francis Cammaerts[n 5] and Catherine Noel "Kippe" Cammaerts, an actress and mother of Michael Morpurgo.[3]
Works
Poems
Belgian Poems : Chants patriotique, et autres poèmes (1915)[n 6]
New Belgian Poems. Les trois rois et autres poèmes (1916 – 3 editions)[n 7]
Preface to The glory of Belgium – An anthology (1915) collated and edited by Russell Markland and dedicated on the front opening to Cammaerts.
Baron Edmond de Cartier de Marchienne (1946) booklet
Article on William Dobson, painter An English successor to van Dyck: William Dobson Second series no III [n 18]
Notes
^Summarised by archivist Zoë Browne: "...became Professor Emeritus after his retirement from the university in 1947. He also received an honorary LL.D. from
the University of Glasgow and a CBE. He was a fellow of the Royal Historical Society.
During his life, Émile Cammaerts was a cartographer, geographer, journalist [for The Guardian (Anglican newspaper) that ended in 1951], poet, playwright, historian, art critic and devoted Anglican. He was Belgian by nationality, and deeply immersed in Belgian politics and culture.
^Ruskin's Discussions on Architecture and Painting Conférences sur l'Architecture et la Peinture in 1910; Val d'Arno in 1911 and; Modern Landscape Painters as Les peintres modernes le paysage in 1914 all published by Henri Laurens, Paris
^Birth certificate № 234 in 1878, Saint-Gilles. His father Jean François Pierre Cammaerts, a lawyer, came from the town of Vilvoorde. His Brussels-born mother was Marie Henriëtte Eugénie Nypels whose father, also a lawyer, was born in Maastricht in present-day Dutch Limburg.