Nel Benschop Explained

Nelly Anna Benschop (16 January 1918 – 31 January 2005) was a Dutch poet. She was a best selling poet in the Netherlands.[1]

Early years

Benschop was born in The Hague and grew up in a strictly religious Dutch Reformed family. She followed the "Mulo" (advanced elementary education) and after that the "kweekschool" (teacher training college), graduating in 1937. She took recitation lessons from Lily van Haghe. During the Second World War, she also received diplomas for English and French.

After the war, she left her parents' house and became a teacher at a girls' boarding school in Driebergen. After that, she worked as a teacher of Dutch and French at a Mulo in Arnhem and a "lyceum" (grammar school) in Veenendaal. She retired in 1981.

Poetry

Benschop started writing poetry in 1948. In the meantime she recited poems of others, with sometimes a few of her own added. She debuted in 1967 by Kok Publishers in Kampen with the volume Gouddraad uit vlas ("Gold thread from flax"). The publisher almost didn't dare to bring it out, but the volume was an enormous success,[2] and was reprinted sixty times. Of all her volumes of poetry, a total of three million copies were sold.[1] Benschop also wrote aphorisms. Several of her poems are often quoted in death notices, especially In memoriam voor een vriend ("In memoriam for a friend").

Her work is deeply Christian,[1] and because of that has not been taken very seriously by literary critics. Her work is considered more pastoral than literary. She said herself, with some self-mockery: "I write meditations in rhyme". Recurring themes in her work are suffering, death and Christian comfort.

Personal life

Benschop died, aged 87, in Arnhem.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: Initiatief voor monument voor Nel Benschop. 20 September 2010. De Gelderlander. Dutch. 11 January 2011.
  2. Book: Rigney. Ann. Fokkema. Douwe Wessel . Cultural participation: trends since the Middle Ages. 1993. John Benjamins Publishing Company. 1-55619-430-7. 138.