The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 100

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 100
98 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Summer 1967 A HISTORY OF THE SAGAS Excerpts—translated by BOGI BJARNASON from the Icelandic of Petur SigurSsson (c. 1930) Of all the Northerly peoples the Ice- landers alone preserved the Saga Literature. Coeval with the discovery and colon- ization of Iceland the history of the Scandinavian peoples emerges out of the mist of legend and hyperbole. This is more than co-incidence; for of all the northerly peoples the Icelanders alone preserved, orally, through many generations, the epics and sagas of men and events, until with the advent of learning they were reduced to writing and thus saved from extinction. The possession of learning sufficient to this task was peculiar to the Icelanders, wherefore memory and tradition re- verts hack only to the pioneers of Ice- landic colonization, but rarely beyond. It is the reverse of obvious why the field of material for song and saga that the Viking era provided was al- lowed to lie fallow among the Norse, Swedes and Danes, and to finally pass out of the memory of men. Yet such are the facts. But the important aspect of the matter is the further fact that the descendents of the pioneers in Ice- land preserved in memory, in the form of song and tale, through many cen- turies, the history and lore of that colorful age. They preserved and pass- ed on orally to succeeding generations the story of the colonization of Iceland, the origins of the settlers, their beliefs and traditions, the founding of the state and its statutes, till the advent of the art of writing provided a more secure medium of preservation. In like manner they preserved, and later re- duced to writing, the history of Nor- way, their motherland, its kings and national heroes, with due attention to their feats, at home and abroad. Not did they stop at this, for they recog- nized as alien nothing that had a bear- ing on the history of the Scandinavian peoples. They preserved inviolate the histories of the Faroes and Orkneys. The history of Sweden would be less complete but for the wealth of in- formation contained in the Icelandic writings from ,the period following the Viking age. The same, and to an even greater degree, may be said concern- ing the history of Denmark, -for the Icelandic writers were zealous in their self-imposed task of recording accounts of events in, or touching upon, the Danish nation, as Saxo Grammaticus, the Danish historian (in his Gesta Dan- orum), gratefully acknowledges. ▲ A A Instances of the Preservation of Reliable Accounts in the Memory of Men. The Icelandic Sagas and older Sagas of the Norse Kings are accounts of men and events of an earlier day. The subject-matter of each had been pre- served orally and passed on from one generation to the next for varying periods up to 300 years 'before their contexture was realized in writing. It may well appear incredible to the mo- derns that reliable accounts could be preserved in the memories of men for so long a time; but the fact is well
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The Icelandic Canadian

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