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The biography is written by Idar Stegane and translated by Dag Gjerde. Foto: Odd E. Nerbø, BT
HAUGE, Olav Håkonson, 19081994. Writer. Born 18/08/1908, in Ulvik. Parents: Farmer Håkon Hauge (18771954) and Katrina Hakestad (18731975). Cohabitant with Bodil Cappelen (1930) from 1975, married 1978.
Hauge attended the private Ulvik intermediate school in 19251926. Later he went to Hjeltnes Horticultural School in Ulvik (1927 and 193334). He was a gardening apprentice for four years; in 1930 at the National Agricultural College at Ås and in the years 19311933 at Hermannsverk State Experimental Farm.
Already in his childhood years, Hauge read a lot. He was a frequent user of the local public library and became good friends with the librarian there, Magnus Hakestad, who had returned after spending 37 years in America. He provided young Olav with books and periodicals and discussed them with him. Hakestad also ordered literature in English, which made it possible for Hauge to apply his skills in English acquired at school. His maternal uncle, Edmund Hakestad (18851937), who lived in the USA for many years, also sent him American literature. In addition, construction workers, including Hauges own father, who had been a foreman during the construction of the Bergen Railway before he married and settled as a farmer in Ulvik, provided Olav with knowledge about the world outside his home village. For many years, Hauge earned his living growing fruits at his farm and performing gardening services for his fellow villagers, the vicar being one, whom Hauge also liked to discuss with and borrow books from.
At the intermediate school, Hauge had learnt German. Hauge also learnt French by himself, and through reading and later translating poetry, he improved his skills in these three languages.
Hauge started his career as lyric poet well outside the mainstream of poetic tradition. His debut as a poet came with the poem "Slåttesong", published in Gula Tidend in 1927. During his stay at Hermannsverk, he published both self-written poems and translated poems in various newspapers in Sogn. He also published poems in For Bygd og By (Oslo, 191232), Den 17de Mai, Norsk Tidend, Norsk Hagetidend and For bygd og by (Bergen, 19401946). Some of his own poems were included in his first book, Glør i oska (1946), but some 50 poems, both translated poems and his own, have never been published outside the above mentioned periodicals and newspapers.
From his youth until he was in his fifties, he suffered from recurring mental disturbances, and he had several stays in the Valen Mental Hospital. As a young boy, Hauge was very shy and restrained. This might explain the fact that he had reached the age of 38 before his first book was published, although one manuscript of his had been rejected seven years earlier, in 1939.
After his debut, Hauge published collections of poems every five years until 1971. His eighth collection, Janglestrå, was part of his retrospective collection, Dikt i samling, 1980, and, finally, he and his wife, Bodil Cappelen, published their picture book ABC (1986), which contained one rhyme for each letter of the alphabet. Hauges Dikt i samling came in six editions from 1972 to 1995. Some smaller selections of his poems have also been published, recited by himself on tape and CD. Some selections have also been published in other languages (English, Icelandic, Swedish, Hungarian and Spanish). In addition to his collections of poems, Hauge from 1967 onwards published collections of translated poems, both anthologies and selections of individual poets, seven books in total. He also took part in the large anthology, Framande dikt frå fire tusen år (H. Kiran, S. Skard and H. Moren Vesaas (eds.), 1968) and in Robert Blys: Odin House, Madison, Minnesota. Utvalde dikt (O.M. Mæland (ed.), 1972).
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