Jan van Nijlen

Jan van Nijlen (born Nov. 10, 1884, Antwerp, Belg.—died Aug. 14, 1965, Forest) was one of the most distinguished Flemish poets of his generation.

Of a retiring nature, van Nijlen, a high official with the Ministry of Justice in Brussels, usually published his verse in limited editions. Among his early volumes were Het angezicht der aarde (1923; “The Face of the Earth”), De vogel phoenix (1928; “The Phoenix Bird”), and Geheimschrift (1934; “Secret Writing”). He gained a wider audience when in 1938 he at last published a one-volume selection from his poems, Gedichten, 1904–1938. Subsequent publications included De Dauuwtrapper (1947; “The Dew Trapper”) and Te laat voor deze wereld (1957; “Too Late for This World”).

Van Nijlen’s characteristic tone is melancholic and elegiac, reflecting his disillusionment with the modern world. His verses recall the Romantics’ longing to escape to a simpler and truer life; they are marked, however, by a classical clarity and finish. Van Nijlen also wrote studies of the French authors Charles Peguy (1919) and Francis Jammes (1918).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.