Ewald, Johannes

Ewald, Johannes
born Nov. 18, 1743, Copenhagen, Den.
died March 17, 1781, Copenhagen

Danish poet and dramatist.

By age 19 he was becoming known as a writer. At 30, addicted to alcohol, he adopted a more solitary life and began producing his mature works, including The Death of Balder (1774), in which he became the first Danish poet to use themes from Scandinavian myth and saga. Of his dramatic works, only the operetta Fiskerne (1779; "The Fishermen") is still performed. He is especially known for his great personal odes and for songs such as "King Christian Stood by the Lofty Mast," used as a national anthem, and "Lille Gunver," the first Danish romance. He is considered one of Denmark's greatest lyric poets. His memoirs (published 1804) are his greatest prose work.

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▪ Danish poet
born November 18, 1743, Copenhagen, Denmark
died March 17, 1781, Copenhagen
 one of Denmark's greatest lyric poets and the first to use themes from early Scandinavian myths and sagas.

      On the death of his father, a poorhouse chaplain, Ewald was sent to school at Slesvig (Schleswig), where his reading of Tom Jones and Robinson Crusoe aroused his spirit of adventure. In 1758 he went to Copenhagen to study theology, fell in love, and, in search of quickly gained glory, ran away to fight in the Seven Years' War. He returned to find that his beloved Arendse, whom he immortalized as his muse, had married another. He passed his final examination when he was 19 and was then already becoming known as a writer of prose and occasional poetry. When finishing Adam og Eva (1769; “Adam and Eve”), a dramatic poem in the style of French tragedy, he met the German epic poet Friedrich Klopstock (Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb), and at about the same time he read Shakespeare (Shakespeare, William)'s plays and James Macpherson (Macpherson, James)'s Ossian. Their influence resulted in the historical drama Rolf Krage (1770), taken from an old Danish legend that was recorded by the medieval historian Saxo Grammaticus.

      Ewald's life began to show signs of serious disorder, especially an addiction to alcohol. In the spring of 1773 his mother and a Pietistic (Pietism) pastor secured his removal from Copenhagen to the relative isolation of Rungsted. There he produced his first mature works: "Rungsteds lyksaligheder" (1775; “The Joys of Rungsted”), a lyric poem in the elevated new style of the ode; Balders død (1775; The Death of Balder), a lyric drama on a subject from Saxo and Old Norse mythology; and the first chapters of his memoirs, Levnet og meninger (written c. 1774–78: “Life and Opinions”), explaining his enthusiasm for the adventurous and fantastic. In 1775 he was transferred to a still more solitary place near Elsinore, where he went through a religious crisis—a struggle between the Pietistic idea of self-denial and his own proud independence. In 1777 he was allowed to return to Copenhagen. His poetic genius was recognized, and his life became calmer despite increasingly severe illness. On his deathbed he wrote the heroic Pietist hymn "Udrust dig, helt fra Golgotha" (“Gird Thyself, Hero of Golgotha”).

      Ewald renewed Danish poetry in all of its genres. Of his dramatic works, only Fiskerne (1779; “The Fishermen”), an operetta, is still performed. His greatest work in prose is his posthumously published memoirs, in which lyrically pathetic chapters about his lost Arendse intermingle with humorous passages. He is known best as a lyric poet, especially for his great personal odes and for songs such as "Kong Kristian stod ved højen mast" (translated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow as "King Christian Stood by the Lofty Mast" ), which is used as a national anthem, and "Lille Gunver" (“Little Gunver”), the first Danish romance. Both these songs form part of Fiskerne.

      Ewald's work was radical for its time in its aesthetic transformation of loss into imaginatively achieved insight and meaning. Thus, though its form is rooted in the classical tradition, his poetry heralded the works of Adam Oehlenschläger (Oehlenschläger, Adam Gottlob) and the Romantic movement (Romanticism), and it anticipated the Romantics in its use of themes drawn from Old Norse literature. It was Ewald's genius that he transformed his sense of an unreadable reality into an autonomous poetic world. While his heroic efforts to imbue his real-life experience with heightened sensibility and poetic imagery may have been tempered by an occasional retreat to Christianity and patriotism, his achievement resonates in diverse 20th-century writers such as Karen Blixen (Isak Dinesen (Dinesen, Isak)), the playwright Kaj Munk (Munk, Kaj), and lyrical poets as dissimilar as Jens August Schade and Per Lange.

Poul Houe
 

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Ewald, Johannes — (1743 1781)    A Danish poet and dramatist, Ewald was plagued by ill health most of his life. A transitional figure between neoclassicism and romanticism, his work is marked both by adherence to the formal strictures of the neoclassicists and by… …   Historical Dictionary of Scandinavian Literature and Theater

  • Ewald, Johannes — (18 nov. 1743, Copenhague, Dinamarca–17 mar. 1781, Copenhague). Poeta y dramaturgo danés. A los 19 años empezaba a hacerse conocido como escritor. A los 30 años, y como consecuencia de su adicción al alcohol, pasó a tener una vida más solitaria y …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • EWALD, JOHANNES —    a Danish dramatist and lyrist, born at Copenhagen; served as a soldier in the German and Austrian armies; studied theology at Copenhagen; disappointed in love, he devoted himself to poetical composition; ranks as the founder of Danish tragedy …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Johannes Ewald — (* 18. November 1743 in Kopenhagen; † 17. März 1781 in Kopenhagen) war ein dänischer Dichter. Mit ihm begann die neuere Periode der dänischen Literatur. Er wurde als der Sohn eines streng pietistischen Predigers geboren, kam früh verwaist in die… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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  • Johannes Ewald — Johannes Ewald, né à Copenhague le 18 novembre 1743 et mort dans la même ville le 17 mars 1781, est un poète et dramaturge danois. Il fait partie des plus importants écrivains danois du XVIIIe …   Wikipédia en Français

  • EWALD (J.) — EWALD JOHANNES (1743 1781) Fils d’un pasteur piétiste du Sønderjylland (Danemark), tracassé par un tempérament irrémédiablement fantaisiste, bohème, maladif il mourra de tuberculose dans sa trente septième année , Ewald se définissait lui même… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Ewald [3] — Ewald, Johannes, dän. Dichter, geb. 18. Nov. 1743 zu Kopenhagen, gest. 17. März 1781; vorzüglich als Lyriker und in seinen lyrischen Dramen (»Adam und Eva«, »Balders Tod«, »Die Fischer«) …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Ewald [1] — Ewald, Johannes, dän. Dichter, geb. 1743 zu Kopenhagen, gest. 1781. Neueste Gesammtausgabe seiner Werke: Kopenhagen 1850–51 …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • johannes — /joh han eez, is/, n., pl. johannes. a gold coin formerly used as currency in Portugal, first issued in the early 18th century. Also, joannes. [1750 60, Amer.; after the name Joannes (John V, of Portugal) in the coin s legend. See JOHN] * * * (as …   Universalium

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