The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1954, Side 15

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1954, Side 15
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 13 THE FRONT COVER VERSE The verse on the front cover is from a poem by Bjami Thorarensen, translated by Dr. Vilhjalmur Stefans- son. It is selected primarily as an il- lustration of the metre in the first and some of the other poems of the Elder Edda (Saemundar Edda hins froiSa). In referring to that first poem, “Voluspa” (The Sybil’s Prophecy), Edmund Gosse, an Englishman of letters, who at the turn of the century was librarian to the House of Lords, says: “The charm and solemn beauty of the style are irresistible and we are constrained to listen and revere, as if we were the auditors of some fugual music and long-buried deity. The melodies of this earliest Icelandic verse, elaborate in their extreme and severe simplicity, are wholly rhythmical and alliterative, and return upon themselves like a solemn incantation.” The magazine hopes to be able to quote from “Voluspa” in future issues. Bjami Thorarensen was one of the early nineteenth century poets of Ice- land. The original of the translated stanza is: “Hver riSur svo geyst a gullinbruvu, havan of hifin, hesti snalitum, hnalega hristanda hrimgan makka, eldi hreifanda undan stalskoflum? IN THE EDITOR’S CONFIDENCE According to the Bard, “The best laid schemes o’ mice an’ men Gang aft a-gley”. The Icelandic Canadian finds it- self in the same position as ‘mice an’ men’. It has been stated in a previous editorial that the spring issue would feature Icelandic contacts along the Atlantic seaboard, and westward to the Great Lakes in the north and to the Mississippi in tire south. Due in part to circumstances over which we had little control and in part to the Chair- man’s inexperience, the only article dealing with eastern matters is, “What Makes Toronto Tick?’ by J. Ragnar Johnson, Q.C. which was received early in February. An unforeseen flood of good ma- terial, much of which would have be- come dated if deferred, arrived dur- ing the latter part of February. This together with material postponed from our previous issue far exceeded our capacity to publish in one issue, limit- ed as we are by financial considerations to approximately forty pages of read- ing matter. Accordingly, with the gracious con- sent of its authors, fine articles by Mrs. Svanhvit Josie of Baltimore, Rev V. Emil Gudmundson of Ellsworth, Maine, Dr. Stefan Einarsson of Balti- more, Miss Dolores Randall of Seattle, and Dr. Tryggvi J. Oleson of Winni- peg must await our next publication. In effect, our original plan to feature the East has been deferred until the summer issue of our magazine. The Editorial Board is deeply ap- preciative of the time and effort ex- pended by the aforementioned contrib- utors, whose ‘labor of love’ assures our readers of an interesting summer is- sue. A. V.

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The Icelandic Canadian

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