The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 62

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 62
60 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Summer 1967 meet him on any day of the week, on his own terms. When the Liberals came to power in 1915, under T. C. Norris, Johnson was taken into the cabinet as Minister of Public Works. He later held the portfolio of Attorney-General. Norris gave this province the best government it has ever had. He re- deemed more of his election promises than any premier of Manitoba, before his time, or since. He put on the statute books more social legislation- votes for women, prison reform, work- men’s compensation, among other measures—than any government that has ever served this province. Stand- ing at his right hand, when these good works were performed, was Thomas H. Johnson, a good parliamentarian, a good administrator, and a good Can- adian. Many years ago, I was invited to join the Liberal Party. With that end in view, I attended a small gathering of the party faithful. Speeches were made by several prominent Liberals. They all boiled down to the same thing—the Liberals were divinely con- stituted to be the rulers of Canada in perpetuity. As the evening wore on a slight, grey-haired man stood up to say a few words. He had not been speak- ing for more than a minute when I thought to myself, here is a man who spells the word Liberal with a small T. I cannot remember his words, brf they were to this effect: Poitics is ser- vice, not self-service. Let us show less enthusiasm for grasping greedily at the loaves and fishes of politics, and more for the good we may be able to do. Let us get down to fundamentals. Let us have a policy that looks beyond our party to the general good of the country. When I tell you that this man was an Icelandic-Canadian, need I tell you his name? I did not have to tell my father. When I gave him an account of the meeting and I came to the one speech that put first things first, D^1 said to me: “that could only have been my old friend Dr. S. J. Johannesson.” I hope that Canadians of Icelandic origin appreciate this truly great man for what he was. In all truth, Dr. Johannesson was a secular saint of humanity. He was not a typical Ice- lander. He was typical of humanity at its highest reach. He was a species composed of a single individual. The pattern from which he was made was used but once. Schiller says: “In the moral world too, there’s nobility. Common natures pay with that which they do, noble ones with what they are.” Dr. Johannesson was a man of noble nature. His works were great—but he himself was greater. But let me read to you one of his poems that reflects the magnificent spirit which was con- tained in his small envelope of flesh. A mouse was raiding his larder — which was never too well stocked. He set a trap to catch this mouse, baiting it with a piece of cheese. He caught the mouse, and, when he came upon it in the trap, these thoughts welled up in his mind and he put them down on paper. Here, in Watson Kirkconnell’s translation, is what he wrote: TO A MOUSE IN A TRAP Cowering and a prisoner, Furry little beast, How your mind is frantic, Check’d your happy feast!
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