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1901 2012
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The Nobel Prize in Literature 1939
Frans Eemil Sillanpää
Autobiography
Frans Eemil Sillanpää was
born on the 16th of September, 1888, at Ylä-Satakunta in the
Hämeenkyrö Parish of Finland on a desolate croft of the
same name. The cottage had been built by his parents, his father
Frans Henrik Henriksson, who had moved there some ten years
before from Kauvatsa in the Kumo Valley, and his mother, Loviisa
Vilhelmiina Iisaksdotter, whose family had lived in the
Hämeenkyrö Parish from times immemorial.
Sillanpää's parents had experienced all the trials and
tribulations common to generations of settlers in those parts of
Finland. Frosts had killed their seeds, farm animals had
perished, and the farmer's children, too, had died, until only
Frans Eemil, the youngest of the offspring, was left.
There was only a mobile school for the farm children, and it was
purely by accident - young Sillanpää's life was to
abound in accidents - that the crofter's son, who was regarded as
a bright lad, came to attend a regular school where he displayed
a real aptitude for learning. Some idealists decided that nothing
less than a secondary school at Tampere would do and, after
giving the matter some thought, old Sillanpää consented
to send his son away. For five years, Sillanpää's
parents pinched and scraped to keep their son in school, after
which he supported himself for another three years and, in 1908,
matriculated with good marks. This was a time in Finland when a
promising young man could study almost indefinitely on borrowed
money, and young Sillanpää was not slow to avail
himself of this miscarriage of educational zeal. He plunged into
learning and his studies were as chaotic as they were long
drawn-out. He did, however, choose biology as his basic subject
and worked hard in the laboratory, cutting up things, studying
them under the microscope, and drawing what he saw until, one
fine day, he woke up to find that five years had gone by; his
examination day was still far off and the kind old gentlemen who
had been lending him money were not prepared to do so any longer.
He scraped together enough cash to return to his home, where he
found his father and mother poorer than ever. He lived in their
hut and shared their meals, which could hardly excite a gourmet's
palate.
His student days were over, his amorous escapades a thing of the
past, but at least it was easy enough for him to start from
nothing. Sillanpää acquired at a nearby village shop
some stationary of the type favoured by village lads for private
correspondence and wrote a short story, which he sent to the
editor of a large city paper without much hope of seeing it
published. To use an expression popular in those days, the story
must have been written with his heart's blood because, after a
very short time, it appeared on the front page of the aforesaid
paper and its author received a very handsome letter from the
editor's secretary, as well as his fee, which was more than
welcome. The story had been published under a pen name but the
literary world of Helsinki soon discovered the identity of the
author and the erstwhile eternal scholar found himself, to his
amazement, receiving letters of extravagant praise. After several
more of his stories had been published in the same paper,
something very unusual happened. He was approached by a wellknown
publisher who asked to be borne in mind should
Sillanpää's literary output stretch to a whole book.
The publisher went so far as to offer him a reasonable advance to
enable him to work in peace.
Yet another wonder - one of a series - occurred at that time. At
an unimportant village dance, Sillanpää met a shy
seventeen-year-old girl who, insisting that she could not dance,
sat far at the back of the dance hall. In spite of her
resistance, Sillanpää dragged her out onto the dance
floor to discover that she could dance after all, which she
proceeded to do with the utmost seriousness and concentration.
This was the beginning of a twenty-five-year saga, during which
Sigrid Maria (for such was the name of the seventeen-year-old
girl) bore Sillanpää eight children, one of whom died.
Mrs. Sillanpää died on an April morning in 1939. In
early November, the widower who, six months earlier, had been in
deep mourning, was standing before the mayor of Helsinki being
asked if he would take Anna Armia von Hertzen to be his wedded
wife, to love her, and so on. To this, Sillanpää
replied with obvious eagerness, nor was Anna Armia's
«yes» a timid whisper. Some days before a telegram had
come from the Secretary of the Swedish
Academy telling Sillanpää that he had been awarded
the Nobel Prize in Literature. A new point had been reached in
the long series of wonderful events with which
Sillanpää's life has been punctuated. As for the
changes which may have occurred in it since that memorable event,
they are, historically speaking, too recent to be worth
recording. May his autobiography, therefore, end with this
red-letter day.
It should perhaps be added that, in 1936, the University
of Helsinki conferred on Sillanpää an honorary
doctorate.
Books published by Sillanpää, of which The Maid
Silja in particular has been translated into nearly every
civilized language from Icelandic to Hebrew, are:
| Elämä ja aurinko (1916) [Life and Sun] |
| Ihmislapsia elämän saatossa (1917) [Children of Man in Life's Procession] |
| Hurskas kurjuus (1919) [Meek Heritage] |
| Rakas isänmaani (1919) [Beloved Fatherland] |
| Hiltu ja Ragnar (1923) [Hiltu and Ragnar] |
| Enkelten suojatit (1923) [Wards of the Angels] |
| Omistani ja omilleni (1924) [About my Own and to my Own] |
| Maan tasalta (1924) [From the Earth's Level] |
| Töllinmäki (1925) [Shanty Hill] |
| Rippi (1928) [Confession] |
| Kiitos hetkistä, Herra... (1930) [Thanks for the Moments, Lord ...] |
| Nuorena nukkunut (1931) [The Maid Silja] |
| Miehen tie (1932) [A Man's Way] |
| Virranpohjalta (1933) [From the Bottom of the Stream] |
| Ihmiset suviyössä (1934) [People in the Summer Night] |
| Viidestoista (1936) [The Fifteenth] |
Biographical note on Frans Eemil Sillanpää
After 1939, Sillanpää (1880-1964)
wrote the novels Elokuu (1944) [August] and Ihmiselon
ihanuus ja kurjuus (1945) [The Loveliness and Wretchedness of
Human Life]. An account of his life, Poika eli
elämäänsä [The Boy Lived His Life], based
mainly on the Finnish radio broadcasts of his memoirs, was
published in 1953. A collection of his political and social
essays and his travel accounts came out in 1956 under the title
Päivä korkeimmillaan [Day at its Highest].
Sillanpää's family name was Koskinen and was later
changed to Sillanpää. His collected works were
published in twelve volumes between 1932 and 1948.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Frans Eemil Sillanpää died on June 3, 1964.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1939
MLA style: "Frans Eemil Sillanpää - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 25 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1939/sillanpaa-autobio.html
