Heimskringla - 20.12.1950, Page 1

Heimskringla - 20.12.1950, Page 1
QUALITY-FRESHNESS BREAD .\t Your Neighborhood Grocer’s For Freshness and Flavor!! CAdADA Bread AT YOUR 6H0CERS LXV ÁRGANGUR WINNIPEG, MIÐVIKUDAGINN 20. DES. 1950 NÚMER 12. PROF. SKULI JOHNSON: Stepkan Q. Stepkanóóon (/853—1927) An address delivered at the unveiling of a monument and the dedication of a provincial park in his honour, at Markerville, Alberta, on September 4th, 1950. Minnisvarði Stepháns G. Stephánssonar, skálds, reistur honum í Markerville, Alta., af Sögunefnd Canada. Myndin er tekin við afhjúpunina er fór fram 4. sept. 1950. Flutti próf. Skúli Johnson aðal-ræðuna um skáldið við það tækifæri og fer hún hér á eftir. Á myndinni eru þessir (talið frá vinstri): Mr. Ófeigur Sigurðsson; Mr. J. H. Holloway, Chairman of the Provincial Parks Board, Alberta; Mr. Dan Morkeberg, Chairman; Two guards of honor, names unknown; Mr. Jacob K. Stephansson, son of the poet; Professor M. H. Long, member of the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada; Professor Skuli Johnson, guest speaker. Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen: I am deeply conscious of the honour done me by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada in invit- ing me to address you on this memor- able occasion. It is one of importance in the history of Alberta, and indeed of Canada as a whole; assuredly it is unique in the annals of Icelandic men in America. But as an old Icelandic adage expresses it: a difficulty accomp- anies every distinction: the honour of participating in these proceedings puts on my shoulders a heavy responsibility. Fortunately the reputation of the dead will not be permanently impair- ed by my remarks. There is further comfort in the reflection that no reas- onable person will expect me to do justice to so vast a theme as Stephan G. Stephansson in the short time at my disposal. But the brevity of time might cause me to make dogmatic assertions about the poet, and my enthusiasm for him both as an author and as a man might lead me to indulge in exaggerations. In order to guard against these faults, I shall throughout seek a footing in facts and illustrate the points I make by appeals to his poetry. Needless to say,' my citations, though they are as adequate as I can make them, are in- sufficient for a complete picture: they present what the Romans would call the scattered limbs of a poet (disiecta membra poetae). I. There is nothing in the antecedents or in the circumstances of Stephan G. Stephansson to account for him. Of humble peasant origin, he was reared on a little farm-annex in northern Ice- land, which was so poor that it long ago went back into wasteland. He had no formal education; his only reading was in borrowed sagas and in the fam- ily Bible. For sixteen years he laboured as a pioneer in Wisconsin and North Dakota and was little known. It was when he migrated to Canada to be- come a pioneer in Alberta that his poetic powers really matured. The prairie-land, the foothills and the Rockies made him a poet of national significance. St. G. St. is essentially in the peas- ant-poet tradition of Iceland. He has a passion for the intricate forms that mark the native Ballad-poetry of the unlettered, and his love of the Iceland- ic quatrain in all its diversities is evidenced by his abundant output of this kind of verse. Of his six volumes perhaps a fourth is devoted to this lit- erary genre. But St. G. St. steeped him- self besides in the earlier lore and liter- ature of his land, and for both matter and metre, he often goes back to the Eddas and the Scaldic poetry. His knowledge of the Saga-literature of Iceland is also amazing, and he is especially fond of delineating potent personages of the past who confronted difficulties or who broke new paths. Often too does he correlate an incident of the past with some vital problem oi the present. He thus puts the precious ore that he has mined from the in- exhaustible wealth of Iceland’s cul- ture to use for his contemporaries, not only in Iceland but also on this cont- inent where he laboured so long and arduously. He has a firm footing in the past and in the present; he stands on Iceland and America; indeed in his intelligent interest in humanity, and his passionate advocacy of the solution of problems of world-wide importance, this bard-colossus bestrides the earth! II. St. G. St. however regarded himself as no world-figure but primarily as a pioneering farmer. He was proud to be a tiller: I am a farmer; all I own Is under sun and shower. This idea influences much of his thought; indeed it colours his concept of life: Life is a growth; Progress is life’s true happiness. Barrenness of spirit is the worst fate that he can wish for his enemies: Send me for foemen persons who possess A wintry spirit and hearts verdureless. At times St. G. St. waxes lyrical over the precious imponderables which his farmer-soul enjoys: What worth on fields and flocks you place? What worth on dollars any Against the wealth, the verse and grace Of summer-ev’nings many? Again and again St. G. St. calls to mind ideas familiar to us from the Ayrshire ploughman: External sheen to rank extreme Ne’er raised a man up, but A kingly nature crowns supreme The crofter in his hut. Framhald á 4. blaðsíðu T JM Jólaleytið eru hugsanir okkar aðallega helgaðar heimilum og fjölskvldum vorum, þá er það sem heimilis-fögnuðurinn kemst á hæðsta stig. Við leggjuin alt í sölurnar til þess að öðlast þá hluti sem nauðsynlegir eru til þess að við getum notið þeirra ánægjustunda. Þeir hlutir eru: heimili, efnalegt sjálfstæði og mentun fyrir börn okkar. Sá grundvöllur sem við leggjum í dag, verður til framtíðar öryggis og vellíðunar fjölskyldum okkar, um ókomin ár. Representcrtlves Winnipeq Branch Phone 926144 Great-West ASSURANCE COMPANY HEAD OFFICE — WINNIPEC w son’s Greetinós As the Holiday Season draws near, we sincerely wish our friends and customers an abundance of good health, prosperity and happiness. We hope it will be our privi- lege to give you dependable, efficient Bay service always. TtolhíiittjíTDati (Ettmptttt|i. • NCORPORATED 2?? MAY 1670.

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