Jan Jacob Slauerhoff (born Sept. 14, 1898, Leeuwarden, Neth.—died Oct. 5, 1936, Hilversum) was a Dutch poet whose romanticism led him to go to sea as a ship’s doctor and whose pessimistic poetry reflects his subsequent disillusionment.
Slauerhoff’s restlessness and contemptuous hatred of Holland are prominent themes throughout his work, from the first volume, Archipel (1923; “Archipelago”), to the last, Een eerlijk zeemansgraf (1936; “An Honourable Sailor’s Grave”). Other negative elements are also apparent, such as the revenge wish and preoccupation with violent death and the destructive course of history. The image of his soul is the ship’s prow, borne along by the sea of fate. Slauerhoff was aware of his weakness and destructiveness, as he shows in the poem “In memoriam mijzelf” (1931; “In Memory of Myself”).