Talk:Gustaf Fröding

Translated poem
I found the following translation of the same poem in an Anthology of Swedish Lyrics published by the American-Scandinavian Foundation in 1930. Translations "in the original meters" by Charls Wharton Stork.

A LOVE-SONG
I purchased my love for money, Else ne'er had I known its might; No less did I sing to the gay harp-string Right sweetly of love's delight. A dream, though it soon be vanished, Is sweet when it answers our will; And Eden to him who is banished Is beauteous Eden still.

This is much less literal than the one in the main article, and I don't care much for its inventions. But the last two lines are well rendered IMO. --CodeGeneratR (talk) 23:31, 3 June 2008 (UTC)

Weird translation?
Den drömmen, som aldrig besannats, som dröm var den vacker att få, för den, som ur Eden förbannats, är Eden ett Eden ändå.

For the dream, though the truth were vanished, Was the princeliest dream I could get, And for him who from Eden is banished Is Eden an Eden yet.

I am not a professional translator, but I am a native speaker of the swedish language. Isn't it weird to translate "Den drömmen, som aldrig besannats" into "For the dream, though the truth were vanished"? It sounds like a too literal translation. I would believe that it would explain it better with "The dream, who never came true, as a dream it was beautiful to receive" rather than the princeliest & vanished words in the proper translation. This can't be changed of course, it would be original research, but I put this here, in case someone else is thinking about the same thing as me. 130.243.158.185 (talk) 15:59, 11 February 2011 (UTC)
 * Translating poetry is usually an impossible mission. The fact that it lacks much of what makes the original poem one of the most cited in Swedish literature doesn't mean it's a bad translation, unfortunately. /Julle (talk) 21:56, 3 December 2013 (UTC)

incorrect dates
Under sickness it states  During the first half of 1990 he spent a couple of years at .... I presume it should be  1890 since he lived August 22, 1860 - February 8, 1911)''

Gaby (interested reader) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.251.175.188 (talk) 21:13, 23 November 2012 (UTC)

External links modified
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Proposed cut
This article seems to deal more with Ida Bäckman than with Gustaf Fröding. I think that part should be cut out altogether, it doesn't belong. /Jan Wiklund — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jan Wiklund (talk • contribs) 06:31, 20 July 2023 (UTC)