Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Wrestling with the Text
- 2 Sibelius and the Poems of the Idealistic Realist Runeberg
- 3 Idle Wishes and Summer Nights
- 4 Diamonds and Rears – Runeberg’s Contemporaries in Finland
- 5 Longing for the Eternal – Nineteenth-Century Poets from Sweden
- 6 Realism and Emerging Symbolism
- 7 Solace of the Harp, Song to My Tongue – Other Nineteenth-Century Poets in Sweden
- 8 Rapid Riders and Hoodwinked Women
- 9 Betrayal, Urbanity and Decadence
- 10 O, kämst du doch!
- 11 A Last Kalevala Excursion
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- General Index
- Index of Sibelius’s Works
11 - A Last Kalevala Excursion
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 May 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Wrestling with the Text
- 2 Sibelius and the Poems of the Idealistic Realist Runeberg
- 3 Idle Wishes and Summer Nights
- 4 Diamonds and Rears – Runeberg’s Contemporaries in Finland
- 5 Longing for the Eternal – Nineteenth-Century Poets from Sweden
- 6 Realism and Emerging Symbolism
- 7 Solace of the Harp, Song to My Tongue – Other Nineteenth-Century Poets in Sweden
- 8 Rapid Riders and Hoodwinked Women
- 9 Betrayal, Urbanity and Decadence
- 10 O, kämst du doch!
- 11 A Last Kalevala Excursion
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- General Index
- Index of Sibelius’s Works
Summary
Sibelius and the Kalevala
The vital importance of the epos Kalevala for the building of a Finnish language and the emerging nation has been stressed repeatedly in the preceding chapters. The pioneering Elias Lönnrot visited the remote areas of White Sea Karelia over fifteen years, collecting, editing and expanding different singers’ runo verses. His first fragmentary attempt, the Proto-Kalevala, appeared in 1834, the first “complete” version in 1835, and the “final,” the New Kalevala, in 1849. There are significant differences between these editions. The primary plot of the epos is the theft of the Sampo, the undefined symbol of prosperity – the Finnish version of the Norse “Ring” – which the heroes Väinämöinen and Ilmarinen sailed to fetch from the Pohjola region. The adventures of the third hero, the warrior Lemminkäinen (a Don Juan and a shaman), were added and expanded by Lönnrot. The only female among the main figures, Aino, was a creation of Lönnrot’s, too, compiled from several sources (see also chapter 8).
With the threat of Russia to Finland’s new and fragile autonomy, the second half of the nineteenth century was a propitious time to develop contemporary cultural expressions, inspired by the ancient runos, that is, the traditional Finnish poetic form. As William Wilson puts it:
The Kalevala was the book that had brought to life ancient, independent Finland and would now provide historical justification for their nation’s continued existence as well as models on which to pattern their own behavior. It was the book whose songs had kept alive memories of those former days of glory through centuries of foreign rule and through attempts to erase the name Finland from the map. It was the book that had elevated the Finnish language to a language of culture and had prepared the way for Finland’s entry into the family of civilized nations. And it was the book, in this time of great need, whose heroes and heroines could be brought to life once again in the paintings, musical works, and literary compositions of contemporary Finnish artists.
Lönnrot’s compilation and Sibelius’s patriotic music served the same purpose: the creation of a national tradition.
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- The Songs of Jean SibeliusPoetry, Music, Performance, pp. 366 - 378Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023