Rabbe Enckell Explained

Rabbe Enckell
Birth Name:Rabbe Arnfinn Enckell
Birth Date:1903 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Tammela, Finland
Death Place:Helsinki, Finland

Rabbe Arnfinn Enckell (3 March 1903  - 17 June 1974) was a Finnish writer and poet. Enckell is regarded as one of the stalwarts of the Swedo-Finnish poetic revival that began in the 1920s.

Enckell was born in Tammela, Tavastia Proper. He studied art in France and Italy. In 1923 he brought out his first poetry collection, entitled Dikter. It was a collection of impressionistic nature poems. The collection and its sequel, Flöjtblåsarlycka (The Flutist’s Happiness), which was published in 1925, were contained Enckell's vivid description of the changes in nature. Enckell was a modernist. For a year in 1928-29 he worked for the avant-garde journal Quosego. He then wrote a couple of semi-autobiographical novels, which included Ljusdunkel (1930). He returned to poetry with the publication of The Cistern of Spring (1931). He followed it with The Sounding Board (1935). The modernist streak in his poetry prompted comparisons with T.S. Eliot. Enckell brought out another collection of poems, The Vault, which was published in 1937.[1] He died in Helsinki, aged 71.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rabbe Enckell. Encyclopædia Britannica. 28 March 2014.