Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses - 15.12.1903, Page 66

Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses  - 15.12.1903, Page 66
56 NOTES ON ICELANDIC MATTERS most intelligent, easy-seated and sure-footed of animals; it would be difficult to desire a pleasanter and, at the same time, more effective kind of bodily exercise.— Notwithstanding the many drawbacks encountered, especially the struggles with a moist arctic winter, cases of extreme old-age are not uncommon in Iceland. The number of living persons over ninety years of age, as the island’s statistics show, is, in proportion to its 80,000 inhabitants, noticeably large; and an article, covering a longer period, by a student of the popular life of his native land (see the illustrated journal “Sunnanfari ” III, pp. 6—7, 13—14) gives the names and stories of many Icelandic centen- arians in the past, one of whom, as is asserted, reached the venerable age of 113 years. — The health-statistics of Iceland show a constant improvement. Formerly deaths of infants where far too numerous, but drier and more wholesome dwellings have greatly lowered the rate.— It is hardly necessary to refer to the influence upon the mind, and through that upon the body, which the novel world he enters, when he sets foot upon the shores of Iceland, inevitably produces on the brain-tired intellectual labourer. Here he finds something fresh — vastly different from the always same and more or less wearisome hotel and casino life, which he lives through in the watering-places of the rest of Europe. Here are mountains unlike the mountains he knows, plains and valleys and lakes and glaciers and fountains and cascades such as he has never seen, surroundings which have not the tameness of familiarity; a past, which is strange to him, and a present abounding in novelty. Such a change of climate as this refreshes the mind as it heals the body. — Of all trav- ellers the keen-eyed Burton best sums up the general effect upon the summer sojourner in Iceland: “It is strange how her beauties grow upon him. Doubtless the scenery depends far more upon colour and complexion than in the genial lands of the lower temperates. But during the delightfully mild and pleasant weather of July and August, seen through a medium

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