The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1955, Side 25

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1955, Side 25
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 23 closer range the varied scenic beauty of Iceland in all its glory. Let it be added that we flew, literally speaking, into that “nightless .world”, which Iceland enjoys in the spring of the year and early summer, and which its poets, not least our own Stephan G. Stephansson, have described In a graphic and memorable fashion, al- though its enchantment is in reality indescribable, and must be experienc- ed. Small wonder ithiat Mrs. Beck found it difficult to sleep during her first nights in Iceland. The bright daylight at night simply kept her awake! Thanks to modern means of trans- portation, and no less thanks to the generosity of the Icelandic govern- ment, as well as of various institutions and organizations and numerous friends, we were able in a relatively short time to travel extensively throughout Iceland and visit noted historical places and beauty spots. The air has become the highway of the Icelanders, and will be that in a still greater degree in the future. Last year, for instance, the Icelandic Airways (Flugfelag Islands) carried fifty thousand passengers on its domestic flights. We flew from Reykja- vik (in the South) to IsafjorSur (in the Northwest) and returned, from Reykjavik to the East Fjords, and from Akureyri and SauSarkrokur in the North to Reykjavik; and as the weath- er generally was favorable, we saw Ice- land from the air in all its scenic grandeur, and no one has really seen how impressive it is, and unlike other countries, unless he has viewed it from the air on a sunny summerday. However, unique and unforgettable as Iceland is seen from the air, one must, nevertheless, travel on land and visit the various historic and scenic places, in order to see them in their right environment and to full advan- tage. Travelling by car, we were en- abled 'to do just this in an unusually large measure. In the afternoon of our first Sunday in Iceland, which was Whitsunday and a truly beautiful day, we drove to bingvellir (Plains of the Parliament) as the guests of Dr. Alexander Johann- esson, President of the University of Iceland, and Mrs Johannesson. Locat- ed some thirty miles east from Reykja- vik, the hingvellir region is one of un- usual grandeur: a sunken lava-plain, wrought in ages past by volcanic fires and earthquakes, “It has a wild beauty of vertical walls, foaming cataracts and water-filled chasms”. Snow-capped mountains rise majestically on the horizon, and on the south side the plain is bordered by the silvery waters of a large lake, hingvallavatn. No word picture does justice to the uniqueness of the scene. Lord Dufferin, visiting the place, said it was worth going around the world to see. In this impressive amphitheatre, outdoors, the Icelandic parliament (Aiding) met from 930 to 1800. On that stage, set in the grandest natural surroundings, were enacted the most important events in the history of the Icelandic nation: The Founding of the Icelandic Republic of old in 930, and the introduction of Christianity to Iceland in the year 1000. More re- cently, there was commemorated in 1930 the 1000th anniversary of the Icelandic Aiding, and there also came true the long-cherished dream of free- dom of the Icelandic nation with the re-establishment of the Icelandic Rep- ublic in 1944. No wonder that, as we stood on that historic spot last sum- mer and contemplated its central

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