Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1966, Side 69

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1966, Side 69
WESTWARD JOURNEY 51 Briem’s textbook in English, first edition, as well as a letter from the sheriff at Seydisfjord to the Danish Consul in Hull, England. Both of these stood him in good stead. But what was most precious (next to the silver dollars) was the unfailing courage and the energy with which he was blessed. These were traits which characterized the majority of the Icelanders that immigrated to America during those years. We boarded the ship one evening and were immediately directed below deck to the bow of the ship. Here we made ourselves as comfortable as we could among the sacks of wool. Never will I forget the constant dampness and the stench there, which was always noticeable when one came down from the deck above. The following morning the ship 'veighed anchor. The progress out of the fjord to the open sea was slow °wing to the unfavorable direction °f the wind. We did not pass the headland at Dalakjalki until about sunset. My grandmother immediate- ^ became very seasick during the niorning, and I became nauseated as the day wore on. It was then that I Pleaded with my grandfather to take Us back and abandon for all time the í°urney to America. The dear old ^nan could, however, not be persuad- e<^) for he never became sick or hownhearted. I was sick all that u|ght and the following day and the u^ght thereafter. From then on I Sradually began to recover and my Srandfather often took me up on e°k and down to the captain’s cabin 0 which Matthildur had been as- s|gned. She never dressed from the tirne We left Iceland until we arrived in England. She just lay in her bed closet by the cabin door. Whenever I came there, Matthildur was eating and when she was finished she began to vomit all she had eaten. Then she began to drink water which was al- ways at hand and then she laughed. When she had drunk she began to eat anew, vomit, drink and laugh but always lay in her bed closet with the curtain half-drawn. Matt- hildur was approximately eighteen yars old, beautiful in appearance and undoubtedly of very light-hearted disposition. My grandmother was of the opinion that she had been en- gaged to the captain, but I was con- vinced that my dear grandmother had no actual evidence other than the fact that Matthildur was for- tunate enough to be allowed the use of the captain’s cabin. Four men constituted the ship’s crew: the captain, a helmsman a seaman and the cook. The captain was a tall man with a heavy beard (auburn as I recall). He was very kind to us and tried to do all that was in his power to make us com- fortable during the voyage. The helmsman was small of stature, blackwhiskered stern and brisk in manner. The seaman was a round- faced, clean-shaven man, constantly smiling. Clearest of all, however, are my recollections of the cook. He was about seventeen years of age, a sturdy lad, fair-haired, of ruddy complexion, and I am certain he had no other traits than those of kind- ness and goodness. He was always exceptionally good to me and gave me a variety of good food when I was alone with him in the kitchen. He showed me a multitude of pic-
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