Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses - 15.12.1903, Side 82

Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses  - 15.12.1903, Side 82
72 NOTES ON ICELANDIC MATTERS settlers unto the latest generation. But all this was not true of the homeland merely. Icelandic bards and story-tellers, champions and ramblers, brought back from foreign courts and camps accounts of the life of the outer world — the doings of kings and warriors, of courtiers and prelates, of soldiers and peasants — and told them afresh to their children and their children’s children. Then it also happened, in the course of time, as was natural, that Iceland not only kept the old tongue, but learned to wield the new pen as well — the new pen that Christianity brought with it into the north. In the houses of her chiefs, in the cabins of her yeomen, in the cloisters of her priests, hundreds of scribes, through many lifetimes, wrote down the sound and the sense of the words that were vanishing, and the tales of the deeds that were 'fading. But for their zeal — writing mostly under the cold skies and during the brief sun- shine of winter — the most powerful peoples of the present world would long ago have lost, past recall, the knowledge of what their far-away forefathers thought and wrought; of how they lived and laboured; of whom they prayed to, and of what they fought for. Thus in the northern isle each great man’s house, in the lapse of years — for there were seekers of rarities in those days, too — became a library rich in lettered wealth elsewhere unattainable — in the varied learning of the North- Teutonic bard and pilgrim and chronicler and rhymer and romancer. There could be read such legends of Germanic heroes as were not to be found in other Germanic lands; such narratives of the Scandinavian kings as no other Scandinavian region possessed; such lives of English saints and Scottish island-jarls as Britain knew not of. But in the end the lore- loving little land was fated to lose much of this well-earned wealth and glory. The manuscripts on vellum and paper — so many that the number of them still extant seems incredible — were carried away — as Rome despoiled Greece of her marbles, as Napoleon despoiled Italy of her canvasses — to enrich and

x

Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses

Direkte link

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses
https://timarit.is/publication/1291

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.