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Enriched edition. Danish Naturalism and Romantic Reflections: Poetic Dreams, War's Toll, and Personal Tragedies in a Scandinavian journey of character and beauty
Niels Lyhne is J. P. Jacobsen's seminal naturalist novel, tracing a sensitive atheist's coming‑of‑age in nineteenth‑century Denmark as love, bereavement, and war steadily test his convictions. With lyrical prose and unsparing psychological clarity, Jacobsen charts Niels's attachments—to Fennimore, to a married muse, to art itself—while dismantling Romantic consolations. The book's episodic architecture and motifs enact a conflict between desire and disenchantment, rendering modern secular doubt with emotional exactitude. A botanist and the principal Danish translator of Darwin, Jacobsen fused scientific skepticism with lyrical artistry, a synthesis encouraged by the modern breakthrough movement led by Georg Brandes. His struggle with tuberculosis and early confrontation with mortality inform the novel's austere ethics: meaning is handmade, not received. Drawing on diaries, travel, and scientific fieldwork, he refines observation into symbol, letting landscape and still life mirror the attritions of faith. Readers of Hesse, Rilke, and Thomas Mann will recognize in Niels Lyhne a quietly shattering portrait of modernity's spiritual orphanhood. For students of European realism and anyone interested in the genealogy of secularism, this lean, lapidary novel offers both an anatomy of doubt and an exacting solace—the beauty of unsentimental truth. It rewards slow reading, inviting reflection long after its final, unflinching page.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable—distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.