< 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica

JENSEN, WILHELM (1837-), German author, was born at Heiligenhafen in Holstein on the 15th of February 1837, the son of a local Danish magistrate, who came of old patrician Frisian stock. After attending the classical schools at Kiel and Lübeck, Jensen studied medicine at the universities of Kiel, Würzburg and Breslau. He, however, abandoned the medical profession for that of letters, and after engaging for some years in individual private study proceeded to Munich, Where he associated with men of letters. After a residence in Stuttgart (1865-1869), where' for a short time he conducted the Schwabische Volks-Zeitung, he became editor in Flensburg of the N orddeutsche Zeitung. In -1872 he again returned to Kiel, lived from 1876 to 1888 in Freiburg im Breisgau, and since 1888 has been resident in Munich.

Jensen is perhaps the most fertile of modern German writers of fiction, more than one hundred works having proceeded from his pen; but only comparatively few of them have caught' the ublic taste; such are the novels, Karin von Schweden (Berlin, 187853: Die braune Erica (Berlin, 1868); and the tale, Die Pfeifer von Dusenbach, Eine Geschichte aus dem Elsass (1884). Among others may be mentioned: Barthenia (Berlin, 1877); Giitz und Gisela (Berlin, 1886); Heimkunft (Dresden, 1894); Aus See und Sand (Dresden, 1897); Luv und Lee (Berlin, 1897); and the narratives, Aus den Ta en der Hansa (Leipzig, 1885); Aus stiller Zeit (Berlin, 1881-18855; and Heimath (1901). Jensen also published some tragedies, among which Dido (Berlin, 1870) and Der Kampfftirls Reick (Freiburg im Br., 1884) may be mentioned.

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