Iceland review - 2014, Page 42

Iceland review - 2014, Page 42
40 ICELAND REVIEW A Lesson from Auden What can Iceland learn from the late English poet W.H. Auden about the Icelandic króna? are you fed up with economic statistics, but still want to get an idea about where the world is heading? Would you quite like to understand the political debate and see past the nonsense thrown at you by politicians? Where can you turn? Well, literature always helps... So when you find yourself in the middle of a debate, as we do, about whether Iceland should adopt a new currency or stick to the tried and tested Icelandic króna, you could do worse than pick up a copy of W.H. Auden and Louis MacNeice’s Letters from Iceland, published in 1937. Auden and MacNeice traveled to Iceland in the summer of 1936 having signed a contract with Faber and Faber to write a travel book. Auden, by the way, had long had an interest in Iceland and was in fact convinced that his family name had Nordic origins, possibly deriving from Odin. This family interest does not seem to have started with W.H. Auden, for his father, George, to whom Letters from Iceland is dedicated, and who told his son many boyhood stories about Iceland, had in his library a copy of Gabriel Turville- Petre’s book, Origins of Icelandic Literature. I know this because the book is sitting on my desk, discovered among the remnants of Auden’s book collection in New York some years ago. Turville- Petre’s supervisor at Oxford was J.R.R. Tolkien, another student of Old Icelandic. But I digress. BY hallDóR lÁRUssOn Auden and MacNeice have arrived in Iceland. At the end of the first month, Auden writes a letter to his wife Erika Mann, daughter of Thomas Mann, that “as it is, I’ve been here a month and haven’t the slightest idea how to begin to write the book.” The letter sub- sequently becomes a part of the book, which turns into a strange combination of practical advice (“The most essential article [of clothing] is a pair of stout gumboots, but with smooth soles or they get caught in the stirrups … At least two pairs of socks should be worn inside the gumboots”), and wonderful verse: Then let the good citizen here find natural marvels: The horse-shoe ravine, the issue of steam from a cleft In the rock, and the rocks, and waterfalls brushing the Rocks, and among the rocks birds. Auden and MacNeice also provide their readers with informa- tion about the sex lives of the locals (“Uninhibited…there is a good deal of venereal disease in the coastal towns.”), and the local sense of humor (“They are very fond of satirical lampoons”). Auden is fond of Iceland, although he has reservations about certain aspects of its culture. On running into Hermann Goering’s brother who was traveling around Iceland with Alfred Rosenberg, Auden observes, w.h. auden, photographed by Howard Coster.

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Iceland review

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