Hunger
The Project BookishMall.com eBook of Hunger, by Knut Hamsun
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Title: Hunger
Author: Knut Hamsun
Release Date: June, 2005 [EBook #8387]
[This file was first posted on July 6, 2003]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: iso-8859-1
*** START OF THE PROJECT BookishMall.com EBOOK, HUNGER ***
Produced by Eric Eldred, Robert Connal, and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team
HUNGER
Translated from the Norwegian of
KNUT HAMSUN
by GEORGE EGERTON
With an introduction by Edwin
Björkman
Knut Hamsun
Since the death of Ibsen and Strindberg,
Hamsun is undoubtedly the foremost creative writer of the
Scandinavian countries. Those approaching most nearly to his
position are probably Selma Lagerlöf in Sweden and Henrik
Pontoppidan in Denmark. Both these, however, seem to have less than
he of that width of outlook, validity of interpretation and
authority of tone that made the greater masters what they
were.
His reputation is not confined to his own
country or the two Scandinavian sister nations. It spread long ago
over the rest of Europe, taking deepest roots in Russia, where
several editions of his collected works have already appeared, and
where he is spoken of as the equal of Tolstoy and Dostoyevski. The
enthusiasm of this approval is a characteristic symptom that throws
interesting light on Russia as well as on Hamsun.
Hearing of it, one might expect him to prove a
man of the masses, full of keen social consciousness. Instead, he
must be classed as an individualistic romanticist and a highly
subjective aristocrat, whose foremost passion in life is violent,
defiant deviation from everything average and ordinary. He fears
and flouts the dominance of the many, and his heroes, who are
nothing but slightly varied images of himself, are invariably
marked by an originality of speech and action that brings them
close to, if not across, the borderline of the eccentric.
In all the literature known to me, there is no
writer who appears more ruthlessly and fearlessly himself, and the
self thus presented to us is as paradoxical and rebellious as it is
poetic and picturesque. Such a nature, one would think, must be the
final blossoming of powerful hereditary tendencies, converging
silently through numerous generations to its predestined climax.
All we know is that Hamsun's forebears were sturdy Norwegian
peasant folk, said only to be differentiated from their neighbours
by certain artistic preoccupations that turned one or two of them
into skilled craftsmen. More certain it is that what may or may not
have been innate was favoured and fostered and exaggerated by
physical environment and early social experiences.
Hamsun was born on Aug. 4, 1860, in one of the
sunny valleys of central Norway. From there his parents moved when
he was only four to settle in the far northern district of
Lofoden--that land of extremes, where the year, and not the day, is
evenly divided between darkness and light; where winter is a long
dreamless sleep, and summer a passionate dream without sleep; where
land and sea meet and intermingle so gigantically that man is all
but crushed between the two--or else raised to titanic measures by
the spectacle of their struggle.
The Northland, with its glaring lights and
black shadows, its unearthly joys and abysmal despairs, is present
and dominant in every line that Hamsun ever wrote. In that country
his best tales and dramas are laid. By that country his heroes are
stamped wherever they roam. Out of that country they draw their
principal claims to probability. Only in that country do they seem
quite at home. Today we know, however, that the pathological case
represents nothing but an extension of perfectly normal tendencies.
In the same way we know that the miraculous atmosphere of the
Northland serves merely to develop and emphasize traits that lie
slumbering in men and women everywhere. And on this basis the
fantastic figures created by Hamsun relate themselves to ordinary
humanity as the microscopic enlargement of a cross section to the
living tissues. What we see is true in everything but
proportion.
The artist and the vagabond seem equally to
have been in the blood of Hamsun from the very start. Apprenticed
to a shoemaker, he used his scant savings to arrange for the
private printing of a long poem and a short novel produced at the
age of eighteen, when he was still signing himself Knud Pedersen
Hamsund. This done, he abruptly quit his apprenticeship and entered
on that period of restless roving through trades and continents
which lasted until his first real artistic achievement with
"Hunger," In 1888-90. It has often been noted that practically
every one of Hamsun's heroes is of the same age as he was then, and
that their creator takes particular pain to accentuate this fact.
It is almost as if, during those days of feverish literary
struggle, he had risen to heights where he saw things so clearly
that no subsequent experience could add anything but occasional
details.
Before he reached those heights, he had tried
life as coal-heaver and school teacher, as road-mender and
surveyor's attendant, as farm hand and streetcar conductor, as
lecturer and free-lance journalist, as tourist and emigrant. Twice
he visited this country during the middle eighties, working chiefly
on the plains of North Dakota and in the streets of Chicago. Twice
during that time he returned to his own country and passed through
the experiences pictured in "Hunger," before, at last, he found his
own literary self and thus also a hearing from the world at large.
While here, he failed utterly to establish any sympathetic contact
between himself and the new world, and his first book after his
return in 1888 was a volume of studies named "The Spiritual Life of
Modern America," which a prominent Norwegian critic once described
as "a masterpiece of distorted criticism." But I own a copy of this
book, the fly-leaf of which bears the following inscription in the
author's autograph:
"A youthful work. It has ceased to
represent my opinion of America.
May 28, 1903. Knut Hamsun."
In its original form, "Hunger" was merely a
sketch, and as such it appeared in 1888 in a Danish literary
periodical, "New Earth." It attracted immediate widespread
attention to the author, both on account of its unusual theme and
striking form.
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