(1865-1931)
A Danish poet, Claussen was independently wealthy and was able to devote himself entirely to his artistic pursuits. He first studied law, then became a journalist for several provincial papers, and he spent time in France and Italy. His travel book Antonius i Paris (1896; Antonius in Paris) tells about his encounter with the French symbolists. Claussen affiliated with the circle around Johannes Jørgensen's periodical Taarnet and became an apologist for a poetic practice that renounced naturalist dogma in favor of a more personal and less social conception of poetry. In Danish literary history Claussen stands as one of the most important forerunners of modernism.
Claussen's first poetry collection, Naturbørn (1887; Children of Nature), spoke in favor of sexual liberation. His second book, Pilefløjter (1899; Willow Whistles), on the other hand, was far removed from the social concerns of the 1880s; the poems in it were highly personal, ironic, and dealt with private erotic themes. The poems in Djævlerier (1904; Devilries) were written against the background of Claussen's travels, and some of them show influences from Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867). Two representative titles are "Trappen til Helvede" (The Stairs to Hell) and "Sorte Blomst" (Black Flower); the latter portrays a prostitute. Later collections include Danske Vers (1912; Danish Verses) and Heroica (1925), which contains the prescient "Atomernes Oprør" (The Revolt of the Atoms), with images suggestive of nuclear war.
Historical Dictionary of Scandinavian Literature and Theater. Jan Sjavik. 2006.