Hymns and Hymnwriters of Denmark
By J. C. AABERG
Published by The Committee on Publication of the Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Des Moines, Ia. 1945
Copyright 1945 The Danish Ev. Luth. Church In America
Printed in Lutheran Publishing House Blair, Nebr.
This book deals with a subject which is new to most English readers. For though Danish hymnody long ago became favorably known in Northern Europe, no adequate presentation of the subject has appeared in English. Newer American Lutheran hymnals contain a number of Danish hymns, some of which have gained considerable popularity, but the subject as a whole has not been presented.
A hymn is a child both of its author and of the time in which he lived. A proper knowledge of the writer and the age that gave it birth will enhance our understanding both of the hymn and of the spiritual movement it represents. No other branches of literature furnish a more illuminating index to the inner life of Christendom than the great lyrics of the Church. Henry Ward Beecher said truly: “He who knows the way that hymns flowed, knows where the blood of true piety ran, and can trace its veins and arteries to its very heart.”
Aside from whatever value they may have in themselves, the hymns presented on the following pages therefore should convey an impression of the main currents within the Danish church, and the men that helped to create them.
The names of Kingo, Brorson and Grundtvig are known to many, but so far no biographies of these men except of the sketchiest kind have appeared in English. It is hoped that the fairly comprehensive presentation of their life and work in the following pages may fill a timely need.
In selecting the hymns care has been taken to choose those that are most characteristic of their authors, their times and the movements out of which they were born. While the translator has sought to produce faithfully the metre, poetry and sentiment of the originals, he has attempted no slavishly literal reproduction. Many of the finest Danish hymns are frankly lyrical, a fact which greatly increases the difficulty of translation. But while the writer is conscious that his translations at times fail to reproduce the full beauty of the originals, he still hopes that they may convey a fair impression of these and constitute a not unworthy contribution to American hymnody.
J. C. Aaberg
Hymns and Hymnwriters of Denmark
Foreword
INDEX
Chapter One Early Danish Hymnody
Chapter Two Reformation Hymnody
Thomas Kingo, the Easter Poet of Denmark
Chapter Three Kingo’s Childhood and Youth
Chapter Four Kingo, the Hymnwriter
Chapter Five Kingo’s Psalmbook
Chapter Six Kingo’s Church Hymns
Chapter Seven Kingo’s Later Years
Hans Adolph Brorson, the Christmas Singer of Denmark
Chapter Eight Brorson’s Childhood and Youth
Chapter Nine The Singer of Pietism
Chapter Ten Brorson’s SWAN-SONG
Chapter Eleven Grundtvig’s Early Years
Chapter Twelve The Lonely Defender of the Bible
Chapter Thirteen The Living Word
Chapter Fourteen The Hymnwriter
Chapter Fifteen Grundtvig’s Hymns
Chapter Sixteen Grundtvig’s Later Years
Other Danish Hymnwriters
Chapter Seventeen