Nils Collett Vogt (born September 24, 1864, Christiania [now Oslo], Norway—died December 23, 1937, Oslo) was a Norwegian novelist and poet who dealt with the conflict between the generations and the struggle for intellectual freedom.
Vogt was a rebel in a conservative family, and his first novel, Familiens sorg (1889; “A Grief to His Family”), is about youth in rebellion against a social order dominated by old men. The second edition of this novel is notable because the author’s preface bears strong witness to the stifling conservatism of his milieu. He was greatly in sympathy with the workers’ cause and wrote songs for them. He wrote novels, plays, and short stories, but he is remembered mainly for his lyric poetry, published in many volumes, including Det dyre brød (1900; “The Precious Bread”), Hjemkomst (1917; “Homecoming”), and Et liv i dikt (1930; “A Life in Poetry”), a two-volume selection of his poems that he himself made in his late 60s. Among Vogt’s principal prose works are two autobiographical volumes, Fra gutt til mann (1932; “From Boy to Man”) and Oplevelser (1934; “Experiences”), which are revelatory of both Vogt and his society. The former, in particular, portrays the past as a burdensome present.