Background
Dahlstjerna was born on the 7th of September 1661 in the parish of Ohr in Dalsland, where his father was rector.
Dahlstjerna was born on the 7th of September 1661 in the parish of Ohr in Dalsland, where his father was rector.
He entered the University of Upsala in 1677.
Аfter gaining his degree entered the government office of land-surveying. He was sent in 1681 on professional business to Livonia, then under Swedish rule. A dissertation read at Leipzig in 1687 brought him the offer of a professorial chair in the university, which he refused.
Returning to Sweden he executed commissions of land-surveying directed by King Charles XI, and in 1699 he became head of the whole department. In 1702 he was ennobled under the name of Dahlstjerna. He wandered over the whole of the coast of the Baltic, Livonia, Riigen and Pomerania, preparing maps which still exist in the office of public land-surveying in Stockholm.
Dahlstjerna's patriotism was touching in its pathos and intensity, and during his long periods of professional exile he comforted himself by the composition of songs to his beloved Sweden. His genius was most irregular, but at his best he easily surpasses all the Swedish poets of his time.
His best-known original work is Kungaskald (Stettin, 1697), an elegy on the death of Charles XI. It is written in alexandrines, arranged in oitava rima. The poem is pompous and allegorical, but there are passages full of melody and high thoughts. Dahlstjerna was a reformer in language, and it has been well said by Atterbom that in this poem " he treats the Swedish speech just as dictatorially as Charles XI and Charles XII treated the Swedish nation. " In 1690 was printed at Stettin his paraphrase of the Pastor Fida of Guarini.