Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses - 15.12.1903, Page 68

Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses  - 15.12.1903, Page 68
58 NOTES ON ICELANDIC MATTERS over his surprise at learning that God has given the sun to this favoured land for a light by night as well as by day. At midnight he reads his guide-book, or gazes at the landscape, near or far, with the same ease and enjoyment as at midday. If he be early enough, he may still see a pale aurora shim- mering in the firmament, but for a sight of that phenomenon in its full magnificence, wrapping the whole sky in a mantle of overwhelming and ever-shifting beauty — of which dwellers in lower latitudes can form no adequate conception - he must wait until the nights have grown longer and darker in the last fortnight of August and through the months of September and October. As he becomes more familiar with his surroundings he will discover, if he be English, that he is acquiring a clearer notion than he has ever had of the life led by his Anglo-Saxon ancestors, and that he is really making the acquaintance of a yeomanry as sturdy as that of the early English ages. If the Althing be in session at Reykjavik, and he enter the capitol to listen to its debates, he finds himself in the presence of the oldest existing legislative assembly — dating back to the days when the Witenagemot of his forefathers was still making the laws of England. From day to day, as he journeys, he will note along his path so many objects, delightful or startling to his vision, that they cannot all be enumerated in the lines we are writing. Among the first of them may very likely be the strange features of the worlds of lava and basalt. The wide- extending plains of the former, the vast dykes resulting from the sudden cooling of its streams, the fantastic masses which they pile up as they flow, and above all such singular gorges as . the Almannagja and the Hrafnagja - - less than a day’s ride from the capital — will overwhelm him with their strangeness. Farther on, in the north, are the clefts of the Asbyrgi — that rocky wonder — with its charming accessories, such as the cool green of trees in its sheltered depths; while the unending lava levels he traverses in reaching it, and which extend into many

x

Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses

Direct Links

If you want to link to this newspaper/magazine, please use these links:

Link to this newspaper/magazine: Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses
https://timarit.is/publication/1291

Link to this issue:

Link to this page:

Link to this article:

Please do not link directly to images or PDFs on Timarit.is as such URLs may change without warning. Please use the URLs provided above for linking to the website.