Soren Kierkegaard

(Romina) #1

  1. Johan Ludvig Heiberg. In literary and
    aesthetic matters, Heiberg had more or less
    the same sort of authority that Mynster
    had in theological and ecclesiastical affairs.
    In younger days Kierkegaard was a caller
    at the Heiberg home in Christianshavn, a
    guest of the celebrated and powerful Heiberg
    couple. Kierkegaard soon acquired the witty
    and elegant tone of the Heiberg circle and
    was almost beside himself with delight
    when someone erroneously attributed to
    Heiberg one of the articles he had published
    anonymously. But when Heiberg, review-
    ing Either/Or, called it a “monster of a
    book,” and then was similarly ungracious in
    his treatment of Repetition, Kierkegaard
    changed direction and made the Heibergian
    position—including Hegel and Goethe—
    the object of his hatred.

  2. Hans Christian Andersen. “He is too
    big and too odd. And therefore he must be
    pushed around,” he wrote in the fairy tale
    “The Ugly Duckling.” And he was pushed
    around by a number of people, including the
    odd Kierkegaard, who took him to task in
    From the Papers of One Still Living,
    from 1838, his very first book, which was
    marked by a stilted style and by mile-long
    sentences. And it was said that Kierkegaard
    and Andersen were the only people who had
    bothered to read the entire book. While they
    were alive, these two men, who would later
    make Danish letters world-famous and who
    are often mentioned in the same breath, pre-
    ferred to avoid each other’s company—most
    likely because they reflected each other’s
    weaknesses.

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