Jonas Lie (writer)

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Jonas Lie
Jonas Lie sitting in a chair
Jonas Lie in 1904.
Born Jonas Lauritz Idemil Lie
(1833-11-06)6 November 1833
Hokksund, Eiker, Norway
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Stavern, Larvik, Norway
Occupation Novelist, poet, fairy tales writer, journalist, and lawyer
Nationality Norwegian
Alma mater University of Christiania
Literary movement Realism
Spouse Thomasine Henriette Lie (1833–1907)

Signature File:Jonas Lie signature.gif
Jonas Lie. Engraving by Hans Peter Hansen (1874)
Jonas and Thomasine Lie monument at the cemetery in Stavern

Jonas Lauritz Idemil Lie (Norwegian: [liː]; 6 November 1833 – 5 July 1908) was a Norwegian novelist, poet, and playwright who, together with Henrik Ibsen, Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson and Alexander Kielland, is considered to have been one of the Four Greats of 19th century Norwegian literature.[1]

Background

Jonas Lie was born at Hokksund in Øvre Eiker, in the county of Buskerud, Norway. His parents were Mons Lie (1803–81) and Pauline Christine Tiller (1799–1877). Five years after his son's birth, Lie's father was appointed sheriff of Tromsø, which lies within the Arctic Circle, and young Jonas Lie spent six of the most impressionable years of his life at that remote port.[2][3]

He was sent to the naval school at Fredriksværn; but his defective eyesight caused him to give up a life at sea. He transferred to the Bergen Cathedral School (Bergen katedralskole) in Bergen, and in 1851 entered the University of Christiania, where he made the acquaintance of Ibsen and Bjørnson. He graduated in law in 1857, and shortly afterwards began to practice at Kongsvinger, a town located between Lake Mjøsa and the border with Sweden.[4]

Career

Clients were not numerous at Kongsvinger and Lie found time to write for the newspapers and became a frequent contributor to some of the Christiania journals. His first work was a volume of poems which appeared in 1866 and was not successful. During the four following years he devoted himself almost exclusively to journalism, working hard and without much reward, but acquiring the pen of a ready writer and obtaining command of a style which has proved serviceable in his subsequent career.[5]

In 1870 he published Den Fremsynte,[6] a powerful tale of the sea and superstitions centering on Northern Norway. In the following year he revisited Nordland and traveled into Finnmark.[7]

Starting from 1874, the Norwegian Parliament had granted him an artist salary. Having obtained this small pension from the Government, he sought the greatest contrast he could find in Europe to the scenes of his childhood and started for Rome. For a time he lived in North Germany, then he moved to Bavaria, spending his winters in Paris. In 1882 he visited Norway for a time, but returned to the continent of Europe. His voluntary exile from his native land ended in the spring of 1893, when he settled at Holskogen, near Kristiansand. His works were numerous after that.[8]

Works

In his works, Jonas Lie often sought to reflect in his writings the nature, folk life, and social spirit of the nation of Norway. His writing often dealt with family life in diverse settings, including portraying the social and intellectual restrictions on women of the educated classes. Lie was a versatile writer, liberal and modern, but also strongly tradition bound.[8]

Among Lie's finest works must be considered Familien paa Gilje[9] (1883) which was a striking document of the life of an officer's family, and the few options given to the daughters of such families.[10]

His two collections of short stories called Trold involve the superstitions of the fishermen and coast commoners of northern Norway. The much anthologized short story Elias and the Draugh was included in a collection originally published by Gyldendal Norsk Forlag, and was reprinted by Roald Dahl in Roald Dahl's Book of Ghost Stories (1983).[11]

Personal life

In 1860, he married his cousin Thomasine Henriette Lie (1833–1907). The couple had five children, of whom two died young. They were the parents of diplomat Michael Strøm Lie (1862–1934) as well as writers Mons Lie (1864–1931) and Erik Røring Møinichen Lie (1869–1943). Jonas Lie died at Fleskum at Sandvika during 1908, less than a year after the death of Thomasine.[12][13][14][15]

In 1904, the King of Norway awarded Lie the Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav. Jonas Lie was the uncle of the author Bernt Lie (1868–1916). Henriette Thomasine Lie was the aunt of Jonas Lie, the Norwegian-born American painter.[8]

Works in English translation

  • Little Grey (1873, translated by Mrs. Arbuthnott).
  • The Pilot and His Wife (1876, translated by Sara Chapman Thorp Bull; and again by G.L. Tottenham, 1877).
  • The Barque Future (1879, translated by Sara Chapman Thorp Bull).
  • The Commodore's Daughter (1892, translated by H.L. Brækstad and Gertrude Hughes).
  • Weird Tales from Northern Seas (1893, translated by R. Nisbet Bain).
  • The Visionary (1894, translated by Jessie Muir).
  • One of Life's Slaves (1895).
  • Niobe (1897, translated by H.L. Brækstad).
  • Selected Stories and Poems (1914).
  • The Family at Gilje (1920, translated by Samuel Coffin Eastman).
  • The Seer & Other Norwegian Stories (1990, translated by Brian Morton & Richard Trevor).

References

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  10. Jonas Lie, forfatterside(Dagbladet) Archived 2001-11-25 at the Wayback Machine
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Further reading

  • Boyesen, Hjalmar Hjorth (1895). "Jonas Lie." In: Essays on Scandinavian Literature. (London: David Nutt, pp. 121–51)
  • Jorgenson, Theodore (1933). History of Norwegian Literature. New York: The Macmillan Company.
  • Lyngstad, Sverre (1977). Jonas Lie. (Boston:Boston: Twayne) ISBN 0805762744
  • Lyngstad, Sverre (1979). "The Vortex and Related Imagery in Jonas Lie's Fiction," Scandinavian Studies, Vol. 51, No. 3, pp. 211–48.
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  • Olson, Julius Emil (1920). "Introduction" to The Family at Gilje. New York: The American-Scandinavian Foundation, pp. vii–xxxi.
  • Wiehr, Josef (1929). "The Women Characters of Jonas Lie," The Journal of English and Germanic Philology, Vol. 28, No. 1/2, pp. 41–71, 244–62.

External links