Holger Henrik Herholdt Drachmann (9 October 1846 – 14 January 1908) was a Danish poet, dramatist and painter. He was a member of the Skagen Painters and became a figure of the Scandinavian Modern Breakthrough Movement.
Owing to the early death of his mother, he was left much to his own devices and developed a fondness for semi-poetical performances, organising his companions in heroic games, in which he himself took such roles as those of Royal Danish Naval heroes Peder Tordenskjold and Niels Juel.
After returning home, he settled for some time on the island of Bornholm, achieving fame for his painting of and ships in storms. He then issued his earliest volume of poems in 1872 with Digte, going on to join the group of young Radical writers who followed Brandes. Drachmann was unsettled, and still doubted whether his real strength lay in the pencil or in the pen. By this time he had enjoyed a surprising experience of life, especially among sailors, fishermen, students and artists, and the issues of the Franco-German War and the Paris Commune had persuaded him that a new and glorious era was at hand.
His volume of lyrics, Dæmpede Melodier ( Muffled Melodies, 1875), proved that Drachmann was a poet with a real vocation, and he began to produce books in prose and verse with great rapidity. Ungt Blod ( Young Blood, 1876) contained three realistic stories of contemporary life. But he returned to his true field in his most famous work, the collection of poems Sange ved Havet; Venezia ( Songs of the Sea; Venice, 1877), and won the passionate admiration of his countrymen by his prose work, with interludes in verse, called Derovre fra grænsen ( Over the Frontier there, 1877), a series of impressions made on Drachmann by a visit to the scenes of the war with Germany. Drachman's novel En Overkomplet (1876) was followed by Tannhäuser (1877), which despite reference to the medieval legend and Wagner's opera from 1845, is a contemporary love story set in Fredensborg.Marianne Stecher-Hansen Danish Writers from the Reformation to Decadence, 1550-1900 2004 p.148 The poems from the novel were set by various Danish composers, including Peter Heise's cycle "Farlige Drømme". During the succeeding years he visited most of the principal countries of the world, but particularly familiarizing himself, by protracted voyages, with the sea and with the life of man in maritime places. In 1879 he published Ranker og Roser ( Tendrils and Roses), amatory lyrics of a very high order of melody, in which he showed a great advance in technical art. To the same period belongs Paa sømands tro og love ( On the Faith and Honor of a Sailor, 1878), a volume of short stories in prose.
It was about this time that Drachmann broke with Brandes and the Radicals, and set himself at the head of a sort of nationalist or popular-Conservative movement in Denmark. He continued to celebrate the life of the fishermen and sailors in books, whether in prose or verse, which were the most popular of their day. Paul og Virginie and Lars Kruse (both 1879); Østen for sol og vesten for maane ( East of the Sun and West of the Moon, 1880); Puppe og Sommerfugl ( Chrysalis and Butterfly, 1882); and Strandby Folk (1883) were among these. At the beginning of the 1890s he again joined the Brandes fraction without giving up his national motives. His many changing sides has often been regarded as opportunism but were probably caused by his eternal enthusiasm and longing for a positive fundament of his art.
In 1882, Drachmann published his fine translation, or paraphrase, of Byron's Don Juan. In 1885, his romantic play Der var engang ( Once upon a Time) had a great success on the boards of the Royal Danish Theatre in Copenhagen, and has remained a classic. His tragedies Vølund Smed ( Wayland the Smith, 1894) and Brav-karl (1897) established him as the most popular playwright of Denmark. In 1894, he published a volume of fantastic Melodramas in rhymed verse, a collection which contains some of Drachmann's best work.
His novel Med den brede Pensel ( With a Broad Brush, 1887) was followed in 1890 by Forskrevet, the history of a young painter, Henrik Gerhard, and his revolt against his bourgeois surroundings. Closely connected to this novel is Den hellige Ild ( The Sacred Fire, 1899), in which Drachmann speaks in his own person. There is practically no story in this autobiographical volume, which abounds in lyrical passages. In 1899, he produced his romantic play Gurre; in 1900 a brilliant lyrical drama, Hallfred Vandraadeskjald; and in 1903, Det grønne Haab.
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