The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Page 34

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Page 34
32 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER 1973 was no choice but to work and skimp to keep body and soul together. The only plentiful commodity was firewood. The forest was dense and tall all the way to the lake’s edge. It had to be cut and cleared before one could plant potatoes, let alone think about growing grain. Where there was no dense forest, there were sloughs and bogs that had to be drained. Now Ingolfur marvelled at the fool- hardiness and courage his wife, Thor- dis, and he had manifested when they settled there. Had he suspected half of the difficulties that awaited them, he doubted 'that they would have dared establish a farm there. And still — there was not much to pick from in those days, they did not have a choice. In the north-western part of the country was a virgin forest and uninhabited prairie, but the im- migrants had settled in small groups here and there. Ingolfur thought grate- fully about his neighbors; 'they help- ed each other in respect to work and necessities of life. Their generosity to each other was just as great as their poverty. He had often looked over the district and marvelled how much those people had achieved with their bare hands. Most of them had passed away or moved; those who had settled and broken the land were now for- gotten — others had replaced them and now reaped the fruits. Yes, it was beautiful and prosperous in Vik nowadays. Ingdlfur looked at his hands, knotted and gnarled from grind and toil. He himself had indeed been victorious in his dealings with poverty, singlehanded farming, and all the difficulties only the pioneer knows, but that was all. He had lost everything else. Thordis, his wife, died young, a little over thirty years of age. She developed consumption from poor living conditions. And what proved fatal to her was losing the children, one after another, for lack of nursing and medical care. Vik had been costly; and what had he gained? Lost to him also was Ragn- hildur, 'the apple of his eye, on whom he had built all his hopes. He felt that some of the blame rested on him- self. If he had kept her at home with him and not thought about educating her, his dream would have come true and she would have stayed with her inheritance. It was in the city that she had first become acquainted with this future husband of hers. Then when her studies were finished and she had come home, there was no let-up on the flow of visitors from Winnipeg. Every weekend the house was full of young people, Icelandic and English, that came to visit Ragnhildur and for a rest in the country over the week- ends. And the group was seldom with- out the doctor. To be sure Ingolfur had found the rest these young people sought somewhat strange. There were car trips back and forth in the district, boating and sailing on the lake, baseball and then dancing and singing until morning. He noticed that Ragnhildur amused herself well, and he was happy for her because there had not been much recreation at Vik while she was growing up. Ingolfur had watched her with amazement among this group of strangers; sometimes he found her strange too. His little girl, the farmer’s daughter, brought up by him in isolation and practically in a wilder- ness — she not only held her own, but rather excelled in beauty, intelligence, and graciousness. And he was deeply happy and grateful that such a daugh- ter could be his.

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The Icelandic Canadian

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