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1890s: The great Danish novel
1890s: The great Danish novel
Lucky Per is a bildungsroman about the ambitious son of a clergyman who rejects his faith and flees his restricted life in the Danish countryside for the capital city. Per is a gifted young man who arrives in Copenhagen believing that “you had to hunt down luck as if it were a wild creature, a crooked-fanged beast . . . and capture and bind it.”
Per’s love interest, a Jewish heiress, is both the strongest character in the book and one of the greatest Jewish heroines of European literature. Per becomes obsessed with a grand engineering scheme that he believes will reshape both Denmark’s landscape and its minor place in the world; eventually, both his personal and his career ambitions come to grief. At its heart, the story revolves around the question of the relationship of “luck” to “happiness” (the Danish word in the title can have both meanings), a relationship Per comes to see differently by the end of his life.
Travel BookTrail Style to Lucky Per’s Copenhagen
There are a few buildings and places of note within the novel to help explain the history and the stories within the novel.
Vestervig Church
There are many glories of Denmark’s oldest cloister, the Vestervig Church. One of them is the Romanesque gravestone with two procession crosses on it. This is named Liden Kirsten’s Grave. According to tradition, it holds the remains of Liden Kirsten and Prince Burish whose seduction of Liden resulted in terrible family vengeance, executed on both.
Bakken
The oldest amusement park allegedly. It’s older than the Tivoli and located in a beautiful setting near the Eremitage, a little hunting lodge.
Trolls
The troll comes from Norse mythology. Trolls in the novel are hill trolls which are slow-witted, sleepy, rural and drawn to the gold they hid in their lairs. Per it is said has a’troll nature’
Destination: Copenhagen Author/guide: Henrik Pontoppidan Departure Time: 2000s
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