Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1936, Side 119

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1936, Side 119
Heima á Fróni Margaret Ann Bjornson. For days the sea liad rocked it- self gloomily, oppressed by tlie weiglit of a heavilv leaded sky. Sometimes fine steel ribbons of rain were threaded between them, like a vast design in filigree. But nsually tliere was no intricacy of pattern in the grey mi.st—no pat- tern, only the monotone of a shroud. Such a prelude is well in keeping with the aura of mjrsticism and i’omance which has for so many centuries surrounded the north; the avid interest in, and specula- tion about a lost continent — the fabled Atantis — of wliich Iceland is said to be one remnant, the most i'emote, probably, from tlie Pillars of Hercules; the morbid fascina- tion of life and culture on a vol- canic island, rudely indented by a jealous sea. We remember Snorri: ‘ The earth ’s round face, whereon ttiankind dwells, is mucli cleft be- cause great gulfs run up into tlie land from the ocean ...” jt. w ’A' w “We have landed in Thule,” wrote Lord Dufferin from Reykja- vik in 1856. And against the dark- ncss of a. dripping night, the great dim mass rising out of the sea into the mist is as fantastically unreal, as terribly awe-iifspiring as the legendary Ultima Thule. Salt spray and the strong smell of fish '7'but the travesty to the imagina- tion of disrnal street lamps. Oil and smoke, and tlie commotion of a harbor; the persistence of the rain. In the cold grey of an October morning, most of the romantic trappings have been shed, but very little of the grimness. Reykja- vik stands in narrow muddy streets, Avhose ugly clay-colored puddles are like lioles in the lieel of a sock; and stares almost vac- antly from tlie windows of its un- prepossessing frame liouses, or in- congruously modernistic ones. Cur- iously bald it is, with its dearth of trees, its unadorned squares, its colorless pond. Flanking this somewhat incred- ible ci'ty is the harbor — its rusty coal barges, and small passenger boats, and picturesque fisliing trawlers, all grey-blanketed. A stinging wind whips in and out of the tangled masts, silently. And then suddenly — the sky with its low matted clouds swoops down as if to crusli the mountains between itself and the sea. The jaggecl peaks across the bay, undisturbed, rise in majesty through the mist, through the wind, tlirougli the rain, oblivious to the petulant sea beneath tliem. Occasionally an anaemic sun ap- pears for a few moments, and tlie mountains are brieflv gold, or hazily corn-colored, or brilliantly purple. But the sea remains stub- bornly grey, and reluctantly the sky conforms, the mountains fade,
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Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga

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