The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Page 36

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Page 36
34 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER 1973 The lake had often before been a companion and friend to him when he had been almost overcome by the storm and tumult in his heart. Here he had knelt in solitude and loneliness. Here he had prayed passion- ately and earnestly. Here he had also questioned the existence of a God. Life seemed to be a relentless aggregate that crushed those who happend under the merciless wheels of chance. Here he had wept the bitter tears of a grown-up man whose will seemed al- most conquered. Here he had also found peace, peace after the over- powering of his feelings. Just the same way as the waves of the lake calmed down after the storm, so he had also gradually found inner peace, as the years went by, learned to be grateful for God’s smile in the sunshine, His tear in the rain, learned to be grateful for life itself. It was young Ragnhildur who mainly brightened and warmed his soul, ever since she was a child and came running to meet him with her open arms, happy face, blue beaming eyes, and her golden hair and clear child’s voice. It was she and nobody else who had spread light, hope, love, and faith in life all around him. He had therefore built all his future dreams around her. She would enjoy everything that Thordls and he had done without. Now she had failed him for the first time! But was it fair to look at it this way? It was her good right to marry whomever she chose to, and nothing was more natural than she would marry. But he had hoped, — actually expected — it to be an Ice- lander. What could he do? Put his foot down and simply forbid her to marry the doctor! No, those days were long gone. He could not do a thing — could not say a word. He knew that he would have to give in in the end even though he resisted it now. But he was the father after all and had brought her up. Did he not have a right to demand that she respect his wishes in those matters? Surely she knew that he objected to her marrying into an Eng- lish family. Should he repay Ragnhildur all her affection (by depriving her of hap- piness? Did he dare? What good had it done her mother to get mixed up with him, to become his wife? It brought on dire poverty, poor health, sorrow, and death. He had not man- aged his own life well enough to dare to overrule others. He had to put uip with this just like the other Icelandic parents this had happened to. And he had blamed them for not preventing such mar- riages. The feeling that Ragnhildur was lost hurt most, not only lost to him but to the Icelandic community in which she was born and brought up and to the Icelandic social life. It was the same story with most of the Ice- landers who married into the English majority. They were lost to the Ice- landers and vanished into an English ocean of people. Old Ingolfur sighed and wished that the Icelanders had been as wise as the Jews, making it a breach of religion to marry into another ethnic group. Because of this they had remained a nation through the centuries, even though they had been scattered throughout the world and had endured persecution and disregard. Ingolfur rose. A cold gust blew from the lake. He looked east and saw the red of a new day dawning. A new day — a new generation, that must make its own history, find its own calling, and make its own experi- ences. Ingolfur had conquered him-

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The Icelandic Canadian

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