Gilbert E. Brooke Poems

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Gilbert E. Brooke
Gilbert E. Brooke was born March 28, 1873, at Hyères, France, and educated at Monkton Combe School near Bath (1884-88), Pensionnat Georgens, Ouchy, Switzerland (1889-90), Pembroke College, Cambridge (B.A. 1894; M.A., 1901), London Hospital (1894-96; L.R.C.P., L.R.C.S.), and Edinburgh (1897; D.P.H. 1902). After signing on as a ship's surgeon, Brooke became Government medical officer in the Turks and Caicos Islands in Sept. 1897. He and Alice Marie Swabey had married on Oct. 6, 1897, at Widcombe Old Church, Bath. His local responsibilities expanded there in 1899 to be J.P. for Turks Islands, District Commissioner, and Police Magistrate and Coroner, and in 1900 to be Receiver of Wreck, Caicos Islands, and Marriage Officer. He went on leave 1901-02 for further study at Edinburgh and afterwards emigrated to Singapore. He became Port Health Officer there in Jan. 1902 and set down roots. By 1905 he was a Lecturer in Hygiene, Singapore Medical School, and his career advanced as he became Deputy Coroner, Singapore (1906), and then J.P. for Singapore (1908). Brooke published two textbooks in tropical medicine this year and the next. These credentials helped him to rise to Acting Government Veterinary Surgeon (1911-12) and Chief Health Officer, Singapore (Jan. 1914). Brooke's broad interests extended to verse and local history. The prefatory note to Oddments, dated July 1922, explains that his poems has been printed before in the Royal Standard, Turks and Caicos Islands, W.I., the Singapore Free Press, the Sydney Daily Telegraph, the Bath and Wilts Chronicle, the Bath Chronicle, the Straits Times (of Singapore), the Malayan Review, and elsewhere. His service in the Turks and Caicos Islands and Singapore earned him a fellowship with the Royal Geographical Society. He and his wife Alice had five children. Brooke, Gilbert Edward. Aids to Tropical Medicine (London: Baillière, 1908. Also 1915, 1927. Revised J. C. Broom, 1942. --. Brooke of Horton in the Cotswolds with Notes on some other Brooke Families. Singapore: Methodist Publishing House, 1918. 9907.ee.9 British Library --. Essentials of Sanitary Science. London: H. Kimpton, 1909. RA 425 .B66 Gerstein Library --. Marine Hygiene and Sanitation. London: Baillière, 1920. --. Medico-Tropical Practice: A Handbook for Medical Practioners and Students. 2nd edn. 1908: London: C. Griffin, 1920. 7307.a.10 [signed at Bath, Dec. 1919] British Library --. Oddments: Being Extracts from a Scrap-book. Singapore: Kelly and Walsh, 1922. British Library 012273.aaa.73 Makepeace, Walter, Gilbert E. Brooke and Roland St. J. Braddell, eds. One Hundred Years of Singapore. 2 vols. London: Murray, 1921. DS 610.5 .O54 1921 Robarts Library Biographical information Given name: Gilbert E. Family name: Brooke Birth date: 28 March 1873 Death date: 1936 Nationality: English Family relations wife: Alice Marie Brooke

wishes of an elderly man wished at a garden party, june 1914
 
 
I wish I loved the Human Race;
I wish I loved its silly face;
I wish I liked the way it wa... [read poem]
song of myself
 
 
I was a Poet!
But I did not know it,
Neither did my Mother,
Nor my Sister nor my Brot... [read poem]
stans puer ad mensam
 
 
Attend my words, my gentle knave,
And you shall learn from me
How boys at dinner may b... [read poem]
a literature lesson. sir patrick spens in the eighteenth century manner
 
 
In a famed town of Caledonia's land,
A prosperous port contiguous to the strand,
A monarch... [read poem]
sestina otiosa
 
 
Our great work, the Otia Merseiana,
Edited by learned Mister Sampson,
And supported... [read poem]
on being challenged to write an epigram in the manner of herrick
 
 
To Griggs, that learned man, in many a bygone session,
His kids were his delight, and physics h... [read poem]
my last will
 
 
When I am safely laid away,
Out of work and out of play,
Sheltered by the kindly ground... [read poem]
the caicos islands, west indies
 
 
O salt-laden land, with your rocks and your thatch trees,
How oft have I toiled through your tr... [read poem]
to a lady with an unruly and ill-mannered dog who bit several persons of importance
 
 
Your dog is not a dog of grace;
He does not wag the tail or beg;
He bit Miss Dickson in th... [read poem]
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