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ABRAHAM VIKTOR See also: Swedish author and publicist, was See also: born in See also: Jonkoping on 18th See also: December 1828
.
He was educated at the high school of Vaxio, and passed on to the university of See also: Lund in '1851
.
While at school he was See also: publishing verse and See also: prose in the See also: periodicals; some of these early miscellanies he collected in 1894 in the volumes called *See also: Varia
.
As a student he turned to more precise labours, and devoted himself to science
.
He had almost determined to adopt the profession of an engineer, when he was offered in 1855 a See also: post on the staff of one of the largest Swedish See also: news-papers
.
This caused his thoughts to return to imaginative literature, and it was in the feuilleton of this journal (the Goteborgs Handels-och sjofartstidning) that Viktor See also: Rydberg's romances successively appeared; he was editorially connected with it until 1876
.
The Freebooter on the Baltic (1857) and The Last of the Athenians (1859) gave Rydberg a place in the front See also: rank of contemporary novelists
.
It was a surprise to his admirers to see him presently turn to See also: theology, but with The See also: Bible's Teaching about Christ (1862), in which the aspects of See also: modern Biblical See also: criticism were first placed before Swedish readers, he enjoyed a vast success
.
He followed this up by a number of contributions to the popular philosophy of See also: religion, all inspired by the same reverent and yet searching spirit of inquiry
.
The modernity of his views led to his being opposed by the orthodox See also: clergy, but by the wider public he was greatly esteemed
.
Nevertheless, it is said that it was his religious criticism which so long excluded him from the Swedish See also: Academy, since he was not elected until 1877, when he had long been the first living author of Sweden
.
See also: Roman Days is a series of archaeological essays on See also: Italy (1876)
.
He collected his poems in 1882; his version of See also: Faust See also: dates from 1876
.
In 1884 he was appointed professor of ecclesiastical See also: history at See also: Stockholm
.
He died, after a See also: short illness, on the 22nd of See also: September 1895
.
In Viktor Rydberg Sweden possessed a writer of the first See also: order, who carried on the tradition of Bostrom and See also: Geijer in See also: philo-:lophy and history, and possessed in addition a glow of See also: imagination and a marvellous charm of See also: style
.
He was an idealist of the old romantic type which Sweden had known for three-quarters of a century; he was the last of that See also: race, and perhaps, as a See also: mere writer, the greatest
.
In See also: personal character Rydberg was extremely like his writings—stately, ardent and ceremonious, with a fund of amiability which made him universally beloved
.
His premature See also: death was the subject of nationalmourning, and had even a See also: historical significance, for with him the old romantic influence in Swedish literature ceased to be paramount
.
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