Captain Mansana & Mother's Hands
THE NOVELS OF BJÖRNSTJERNE BJÖRNSON
Edited by EDMUND GOSSE
Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 3s. net
Synnövé Solbakken Arne A Happy Boy The Fisher Lass The Bridal March, & One Day Magnhild, & Dust Captain Mansana, & Mother's Hands Absalom's Hair, & A Painful Memory
LONDON WILLIAM HEINEMANN 21 Bedford Street, W.C.
Captain Mansana , under the title of Kaptejn Mansana, en Fortælling fra Italien , was originally printed, in 1875, in the Norwegian periodical Fra Fjeld og Dal . It did not appear in book form until August 1879, when it was published, in a paper cover with a startling illustration, in Copenhagen. Captain Mansana was written at Aulestad. It was almost immediately published in a Swedish, and later in a German, translation.
A Norwegian magazine, entitled Nyt Tidsskrift , was started in Christiania in 1882, and continued to represent extreme liberal views in Norway until 1887, when it ceased to appear. In 1892 an attempt was made to resuscitate this periodical, under the general editorship of J. E. Sars. The first number of this new series appeared in November of that year, the opening article being the story of Mors hænder ( Mother's Hands ). It was reprinted in August 1894, in the collection called , Nye Fortællinger . It is now for the first time translated into English.
E. G .]
The following note was prefixed by the author to the first edition of Captain Mansana: an Italian Tale :
This story was originally published, several years ago, in a Danish Christmas Annual, From Hill and Dale, which was edited by Mr. H. J. Greensteen. Captain Mansana has already run through two editions in German, and many friends have urged the author to republish it, in a separate form, and in his own tongue.
The following remarks seem necessary in consequence of some criticisms which have appeared in the Danish and Swedish press. The narrative, in all essential particulars, is based on facts, and those of its incidents which appear most extraordinary, are absolutely historical, the minutest details being in some cases reproduced. Mansana himself is drawn from life. The achievements credited to him in these pages, are those he actually performed; and his singular experiences are here correctly described, so far, at least, as they bear upon his psychological development.