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Bernhard Severin Ingemann

Poet and author (1789-1862)

We can only become what God wants of us, whether it be great or small.”

During the bombardment of Copenhagen in 1807, Ingemann was on guard duty on the ramparts as a member of the student corps. Meanwhile, his house and his earliest writings went up in flames.

For Ingemann, the city was a contrast to the old parsonage on the island of Falster where he had grown up. He later brought that environment into his writings when talking of flowers that ”peep at each other” and  when ”merry little birds call to each other” in his Morgensange for Børn (Morning Songs for Children).

As a young student in Copenhagen, Ingemann was more preoccupied with the Gothic literature of the time and among other things wrote several exciting fairy tales and stories.

After a time spent studying in Rome, where he made the acquaintance of the sculptor H.E. Freund and  Bertel Thorvaldsen, he became a teacher of Danish at Sorø Academy. Here, he wrote a sequence of historical poems and novels that became very widely read. The books were vivid and good humoured and maintained the historical idea that Denmark would thrive if the king and the people kept faith with God.

Ingemann also wrote some of the most beautiful of Danish hymns. Dejlig  er Jorden (Lovely is the earth), Glade Jul (Happy Christmas) and Lysets engel gaar med Glans (Radiant is the angel of light) all give an impression of the wealth and depth of life.

Facts

1817 Studies in Rome
1822 Teacher at Sorø Academy

Selected Works

1826  Valdemar Seier (Valdemar the Victorious)
1828 Erik Menveds Barndom (The Childhood of Erik Menved)
1833 Kong Erik og de Fredløse (King Erik and the Outlaws)
1835 Prinds Otto af Danmark (Prince Otto of Denmark)
1835 Morgensange for Børn (Morning Songs for Children)
1837-1839

Morgen- og Aftensange (Songs for Morning and Evening). Melodies
1839 by C.E.F. Weyse

More About Ingemann

C.W. Eckersberg: B.S. Ingemann. U.å. Det Kongelige Bibliotek



 
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