|
1901 2012
Prize category:
|
The Nobel Prize in Literature 1944
Johannes V. Jensen
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Anders Österling, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy, December 10, 1945
Today Johannes V. Jensen will receive in
person the Nobel Prize in Literature for 1944, and we are happy
to salute the great Danish writer who since the beginning of the
century has been in the front rank, always active, for a long
time controversial, but universally admired for his vitality.
This child of the dry and windy moors of Jutland has, almost out
of spite, astonished his contemporaries by a remarkably prolific
production. He could well be considered one of the most fertile
Scandinavian writers. He has constructed a vast and imposing
literary œuvre, comprising the most diverse genres:
epic and lyric, imaginative and realistic works, as well as
historical and philosophical essays, not to mention his
scientific excursions in all directions.
This bold iconoclast and stylistic innovator has increasingly
become a patriarchal classic, and in his heart he feels close to
the poetry of the golden age and hopes that one day he will be
counted among the life-giving tutelary spirits of his
nation.
Johannes V. Jensen has been such a passionate student of
biological and philosophical evolution that he should be amazed
at the singular course of his own development. A conquering
instinct forms the basis of his being. He was a native of
Himmerland, a relatively dry region in western Jutland, and his
impressions of men and things were engraved indelibly on his
consciousness. Later he was to remember those resources that were
hidden beneath the sensations of childhood, the ancient treasure
of family memories. His father, the veterinarian of Farsö,
came from that area, and through his paternal grandfather, the
old weaver of Guldager, Jensen is directly descended from
peasants. Characteristically enough, his first book dealt with
the province of his origin. His incomparable
Himmerlandshistorier offer an original portrait gallery of
primitive and half-savage creatures who are still subject to
ancient fears. The promised land of his childhood, powerful and
alive with the past, is found again in his mature poetry.
The first books of Johannes V. Jensen reveal him as a young man
from the provinces; a student of opposition, living in
Copenhagen; an arduous and agitated youth, fighting passionately
against intellectual banality and narrow-mindedness. This native
of Jutland, self-conscious, difficult to approach, but sensitive,
was soon to find his country too narrow. Stifled by the familiar
climate of the Danish isles, he threw himself into exotic
romanticism with the cool passion of a gambler. His travels
across foreign continents for the first time opened to him the
space needed by his restless, unchained imagination. During that
period of his life he sang the praise of technology and
mechanization. Just as his compatriot H. C. Andersen was perhaps
the first to describe the charms of railway travel, Johannes V.
Jensen was the prophet of the marvels of our age, of skyscrapers,
motor cars, and cinemas, which he never tires of praising in his
American novels, Madame D'Ora (1904) and Hjulet
(1905) [The Wheel]. But soon he entered into a new stage of his
development; at the risk of simplifying matters we might say
that, having satisfied his passion for distant travel, he began
to look in time for what he had pursued in space. The same man
who had sung the modern life, with its rapid pace and noisy
machines, has become the spectator of ancient epochs and has
devoted himself to the study of the long, slow periods during
which man first sought adventure.
Thus we come to perhaps his most important creation, the six
volumes combined under the title Den lange rejse, which
leads us from the ice age to Christopher Columbus. The central
theme or one of the central themes of this work is the universal
mission of the Scandinavian people, from the great migrations and
the Norman invasion to the discovery of America. Jensen considers
Christopher Columbus a descendant of the Lombards, in short a
Nordic man, if not a Jutlander like himself. In this monumental
series appears a legendary figure, Nornagestr. He is not at all
the same person who appears at the court of King Olaf Tryggvason
to tell his stories and die there. According to the Icelandic
saga he was three hundred years old; but Jensen makes him even
older and turns him into a kind of Ahasverus, ubiquitous, always
behind his time, a stranger among the new generations, but
nevertheless younger than they because he lived at a time when
existence itself was young and mankind closer to its origins. The
writer has followed tradition only as far as it was useful to
him. Three prophetesses came to Nornagestr's mother to see the
child and one of them predicted that he would die as soon as the
candle could no longer burn. Gro, the mother, immediately
extinguished the candle and gave it to the child as an amulet. In
the work of Johannes V. Jensen, Nornagestr sometimes lights it in
foreign lands and whenever he does so a deep abyss of time opens
before him. When he comes to again, seized by the love of life,
he is transported to his country, the fresh and green
Zealand.
All legends exist because reason alone cannot clarify experience.
What then is Nornagestr, who plays such an important role in the
epic of the Danish master? Perhaps it is the spirit of the Nordic
people rising from the night like a phantom or like an atavistic
creature. One suspects that this unique globetrotter with his
harp is closely related to the author himself, who has given him
many ideas about life and death, and about the close relation
between the present and eternity - the precious fruits of
experiences gathered from the lands and seas of the globe.
For Johannes V. Jensen, who grew up on a Jutland moor where the
horizon is often indented by a line of tumuli, it was natural to
divide his interests between facts and myths and to seek his way
between the shadows of the past and the realities of the present.
His example reveals to us both the attraction of the primitive
for a sensitive man and the necessity of transforming brute force
into tenderness. He has attained the summit of his art by means
of these violent contrasts. A fresh, salty breeze blows through
his work, which unfolds with vivid language, powerful expression,
and singular energy. Precisely in the poets most deeply rooted in
their country do we find this poetic genius for words. Jensen is
the voice of Jutland and of Denmark. With his talents he deserves
the title of the most eminent narrator of the victorious struggle
of the Nordic people against nature, and of the continuity of the
Nordic spirit throughout the ages.
Mr. Jensen - If you have listened to what I have just said you
will certainly think that the few moments I had were much too
short to accomplish the long voyage through your work, and that I
have neglected important aspects of it. It is fortunate for us as
well as for you that a proper presentation is hardly necessary at
all in your case. You are a well-known member of our great family
and as such you are now asked to receive from the hands of our
King the distinction which the Swedish Academy has awarded
you.
At the banquet, Professor A.H.T. Theorell, Director of the Department of Biochemistry at the Nobel Institute of Medicine, called Mr. Jensen «the splendid representative of the proud literary tradition of our dear sister country, Denmark».
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1944
MLA style: "Nobelprize.org". Nobelprize.org. 22 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1944/presentation-speech.html
