Littell's Living Age/Volume 170/Issue 2200/Luna

[The most eminent sonneteer whom Sweden has produced is Erik Johan Stagnelius, who was almost precisely a contemporary of Shelley, and slightly resembled him in temperament. He was born in 1793 in a parsonage on the island of Oland, his father becoming, in the son's childhood, Bishop of Kalmar. The poet had a brilliant if somewhat eccentric career at the University of Lund. He wrote early, and soon surpassed all that had written Swedish verse before him. He enjoyed a great success in various departments of lyrical and dramatic literature, and though he was melancholy and capricious, and of a delicate constitution, his death at the age of twenty-nine, in the beginning of 1823, was a surprise to every one. He was found dead, but how he died remains a complete mystery. The fame of Stagnelius is eclipsed, in his own country, only by that of Tegnér, and his sonnets, though exceedingly mystical and often obscure, are certainly the most original in the language. As no English version of them has ever been printed, I have attempted to translate the following examples, at the request of my friend Mr. S. Waddington]

slumber hung o'er sea and hill and plain; With pale pink cheek fresh from her watery caves Slow rose the moon out of the midnight waves, Like Venus out of ocean born again. Olympian blazed she on the dark blue main; "So shall, ye gods," — hark how my weak hope raves! —     "My happy star ascend the sea that laves Its shores with grief, and silence all my pain!" With that there sighed a wandering midnight breeze High up among the topmost tufted trees, And o'er the moon's face blew a veil of cloud; And in the breeze my genius spake, and said, "While thy heart stirred, thy glimmering hope has fled,    And like the moon lies muffled in a shroud."