The classically inspired Latin poetry of the Dane Christian Wedsted
(1720-57) forms an important part of a manuscript collection of his Latin and
German writings. Produced first in Europe and later in Colonial America,
Wedsted's exclusively Latin work consists of thirty-eight poems of varying
length, meter, and content as well as two short pieces of epistolary prose. The
author's life and the personal and public circumstances leading to the
production of individual poems may be traced chiefly from the verses
themselves, from a few isolated pieces of personal poetry and prose
correspondence addressed to him by others, and from the records of the
Pennsylvania German community in which he lived during his last years.
Concentrating chiefly on Wedsted's poetry, this paper describes the present
state of my efforts to locate, organize, transcribe, and translate this truly
unique and almost unknown verse collection.
Wedsted had considerable training in classical languages during his
school days in Denmark, as evidenced in a manuscript composition book, his
Liber Stilorum (1737), where his talent for writing Latin prose and poetry is
clear. Of the extant poems produced in subsequent years, sixteen were written
in Europe and date from after 1749; five are undated; and the remaining
seventeen are placed with certainty in Pennsylvania after the author's arrival
there in 1753. For the most part, the poems are in two meters, the Sapphic
strophe and the elegiac couplet, and they display a wide range of theme and
subject matter. Some pieces are of a purely personal nature, including simple
birthday wishes brimming with honest expressions of affection toward familiars,
while others celebrate both festive occasions and common, everyday pleasures.
Another type of poem represents a much more religiously oriented composition,
frequently adorned with the Latin equivalent of the highly expressive and
emotional language typical of contemporary German Pietism. The addressees of
these pieces are often the leaders of Wedsted's community or influential
Europeans sympathetic to its religious ideals. In every instance, these poems
afford valuable insights both into the Classical Tradition in contemporary
Europe and Colonial America and into the significant social, religious, and
historical issues of the day.
This paper will be presented in Latin and will feature excerpts from
representative poems read aloud and analyzed in their historical, cultural, and
overhead transparencies and color slides of the manuscript material itself
will accompany the presentation.