Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Qupperneq 79

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Qupperneq 79
ON THE EBBING TIDE 61 the farm—on that they were agreed —but their love for each other and their joy in close companionship had gradually waned and tumed to re- serve, then indifference, and at last rose up like a wall between them which neither of them tried to break down. He had always blamed it on the difference in their dispositions. He was domineering, ill-tempered, industrious; she stubborn, obstinate and taciturn. But, after all, were not the real causes too much hard work, too much fatigue, too much mon- otony which gradually took the joy out of life and destroyed all com- panionship? Solveig had been a cheerful, loving, beautiful woman. She was still beautiful, but the joy of life had left her. Wasn’t it his fault that she had lost it? Taciturn, serious, bossy and constantly work- ing—Solveig was that now. Even his mother, if she were alive, would have thought Solveig had gone too far in this, his mother who was afraid Solveig was a frivolous, worthless creature when he became engaged to her in defiance of every- thing and everyone. He then vowed to give her a life of ease to his dying day. But had he done that? Had he always made life easy for her? As he drove slowly homewards, Ofeigur clearly saw, in his mind’s eye, the events of the evening when they pledged their troth. He saw every detail of the drive they took that evening. Very different it was from this drive in every respect ex- cept one—it was Christmas Eve. Then his companions were youth, love and hope—Solveig. Now death rode with him. That night long ago a Christmas party was being held in the little country schoolhouse—a great event in those days. His younger brothers and sisters were beside themselves with joy of anticipation. He, too, looked forward to the party, mostly because Solveig was going with them. Solveig, who had come from Ice- land in the spring, was at the time employed as a domestic in their home. She hadn’t been with the family long when Ofeigur realized that he wanted to marry her, al- though she was but a poor lowly servant girl. That is, he would marry her, if only she would have him. But she had always held herself aloof when she so desired. There was much hustle and bustle getting ready to go. Ofeigur saw to it that his brothers and sisters all went in the large sleigh and that the cutter, which had room for only two, was reserved for himself and Sol- veig, and he harnessed his favorite horse to it. It was a typical Manitoba Christ- mas Eve, clear and cold, with starry skies. The moon shone bright. A dead calm reigned. The air was so still and quiet that it almost seemed as if the night were holding its breath. But it was bitter cold. The silvery white snowdrifts covered everything, lying in crested waves like stiffened waves of the oeean. In some ways the prairies resemble the ocean. Like it, they fill the soul with a burning desire to set out to explore the immense unknown. In the sum- mer they make one sad, but in win- ter they fill one with fear and dread,
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