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3 - Poet and Professor: Adam Simons

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2021

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Summary

Abstract

Relatively little is known about Adam Simons (1770-1834), professor of Dutch Literature and Rhetoric at the university of Utrecht since 1815. That is not so surprising, as Simons wrote no literary history or any other type of monograph. Perhaps this is one of the reasons why, despite his being part of the first generation of professors of Dutch language and literature, virtually no attention has been paid him. In this chapter, Simons’ work is examined, both his poetry and his treatises. Simons was known primarily as a poet. Even after becoming professor, he remained predominately a poet. It was from this perspective that, on various occasions, he articulated his thoughts about the essence of poetry, but he also declaimed various essays on literary history, which are studied in this chapter.

Keywords: Adam Simons, literary history, Dutch poetry, Vondel, Romanticism

Introduction

In the spring of 1821, the German student August Heinrich Hoffman von Fallersleben crossed the border into the Netherlands. He intended to travel around while at the same time immersing himself in Middle Dutch literature. He went first to Utrecht, where he paid Professor Adam Simons (1770-1834) a visit. When Simons learned what the German's plans were, he responded: ‘Sir, it is not the custom in our country to go on a literary journey’. After a little while, once he had determined that Hoffmann was neither an adventurer nor vagabond, he warmed to him, and wanted to show him just how well-acquainted he was with the older Dutch literature, but Hoffman was unimpressed, claiming that what he heard were ‘things so widely known, that anyone might know them’. When Simons started about the Rhymed Chronicle of Klaas Kolijn and its author, Hoffmann understood that Simons was trying to catch him out. Balthazar Huydecoper had, after all, already proven in 1772 that this chronicle was a seventeenth-century hoax and therefore not a mediaeval manuscript. The visit came subsequently to a close, Hoffmann noting: ‘We parted as good friends, and never saw one another again’.

This is a rare eye-witness account of the Utrecht Professor Adam Simons. Who was this man?

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Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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