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JOHAN LUDVIG See also: Swedish poet, son of a See also: sea-captain, was See also: born at Jakobstad, in Finland, on the 5th of See also: February 1804
.
He was brought up by an See also: uncle at Ule&borg, and entered the university of See also: Abo in the autumn See also: term of 1822
.
In 1823 he broke off his studies to See also: act as tutor in two quiet Finnish villages, Saarijarvi and Ruovesi, where he gained a thorough knowledge of the popular See also: life and See also: poetry, and on his return to Abo he began to contribute verses to the See also: local See also: newspapers
.
In the spring of 1827 he received the degree of See also: doctor of philosophy
.
The university had been removed after the See also: great fire of 1827 to See also: Helsingfors, where See also: Runeberg became, in 1830, See also: amanuensis to the council of the university
.
In the same See also: year he published at Helsingfors his first See also: volume of Dikter (Poems), and a collection of Serbiska folksanger (Servian folksongs) translated into Swedish
.
In 1831 his verse See also: romance of Finnish life, Grafven i Perrho (The See also: Grave in Perrho), received the small gold medal of the Swedish See also: Academy, and the poet married Fredrika Charlotta Tengstrom, daughter of the See also: arch-See also: bishop of Finland
.
In the same year he was appointed university lecturer on See also: Roman literature
.
In 1832 he published his beautiful little idyll, Elgskyttarne (The See also: Elk-Hunters); and in 1833 a second collection of lyrical poems
.
He founded in 1832 the Helsingfors Morgonblad, a paper which dealt chiefly with aesthetic and See also: literary questions, and exercised great influence both in Sweden and Finland
.
In it appeared many of his own poems and tales
.
His See also: comedy, Friaren fran Landet (The Country See also: Lover, 1834), was not a success, but in 1836 he published See also: Hanna, a charming idyll of Finnish country life, written in hexameters
.
In 1837 Runeberg accepted the chair of Latin at Borg&See also: College, and resided in that little See also: town for the rest of his life
.
He was now recognized in his remote Finland retirement as second only to See also: Tegner among the poets of Sweden
.
In 1841 he published Nadeschda, a romance of See also: modern See also: Russian life, and Julgvallen (See also: Christmas See also: Eve), another idyll of Finnish life
.
The third volume of his Dikter bears the date 1843, and the See also: noble See also: cycle of unrhymed verse romances called Kung Fjalar, the setting of which is taken from old Scandinavian See also: legend, was published in 1844
.
Finally, in 1848, he achieved a great popular success by his splendid series of poems on the war of independence in 18o8, when Swedes and Finns fought See also: side by side
.
The series bears the name of Fanrik Stals Sagner (Ensign See also: Steel's Stories); a second series appeared in 186o
.
From 1847 to 1850 the poet was rector of Borg& College, a See also: post which he resigned to take the only journey out of Finland which he ever accomplished, a visit to Sweden in 185r
.
In 1854 he collected his See also: prose essays into a volume entitled Smarre Berattelser
.
In the same year he was made president of a committee for the preparation of a See also: national Psalter, which
issued, in 18J7, a psalm-See also: book largely contributed by Runeberg for public use
.
He once more attempted comedy in his Kan ej (Can't) in 1862, and tragedy, with infinitely more success, in his stately Kungarne pd See also: Salamis (The See also: Kings at Salamis) in 1863
.
Runeberg died at Borg& on the 6th of May 1877
.
His writings were collected by C
.
R . Nyblom in six volumes in 187o, and his See also: posthumous writings in three volumes (1878-79)
.
The poems of Runeberg show the influence of the Greeks and of Goethe upon his mind; but he possesses a great originality
.
It is hardly possible to over-estimate the value of his patriotic poems as a See also: link between the Swedish and Finnish nations
.
He has remained one of the most popular Swedish poets, although his whole life was spent in Finland
.
An account of his life and See also: works by C
.
R
.
Nyblom is prefixed to the Samlade Skrifter of 187o
.
For a minute See also: criticism of Runeberg's See also: principal poems, with See also: translations, see Gosse's Studies in the Literature of See also: Northern See also: Europe (1879)
.
A selection of his lyrical pieces was published in an See also: English See also: translation by Messrs Magnusson & See also: Palmer in 1878
.
There are also monographs on Runeberg by Dietrichson and Rancken (See also: Stockholm, 1864), by Cygnaus(Helsingfors, 1873), by Ljunggren (See also: Lund, 1882-83), and Peschier (See also: Stuttgart, 1881)
.
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