The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Side 43

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Side 43
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 41 PART III — of Solveig Sveinsson’s story tells of the determi- nation of a young girl to do well at school and to “become a part of the world” she had read about. To Winnipeg she must go and attend collegiate. To Winnipeg she proceeded to a friend of the family, with a dollar in her purse which her Dad gave her. She obtained a place where she could work for her board and attend school, and in addition receive a dollar a montnh. At school she was at first derided for her clothing and worn shoes, but she showed spunk. With her first dollar earned she bought a “beautiful pair of shoes”. Presently derision changed to respect and she came to be accepted by her fellow students fty m hum solveig ms Time passed and did not hang too heavily on my hands with a little childish fun snatched here and there valued the more because it came so seldom. I studied hard and really lived for the time that I would be through, at least that far that I could get a permit to teach at one of the schools in our district. I was sorely in need of so many things. My dollar a month could not be stretched further than I did manage to stretch it. The older I got the more keenly I felt the lack of so many things that all the other girls seemed to have. The time came sooner than I ex- pected. One day in November I was instructed to stay in after school. Trembling, fearing that something had gone wrong, I appeared at the tea- cher’s desk after school. Smiling she told me she had good news for me. The man who had been engaged to teach at my home school found it necessary to leave, so the school board, which consisted of my father and two neighbors, had written to the Department of Education in Win- nipeg, requesting that I be granted permission to teach at their school to finish the other teacher’s term. “The Department got in touch with us this morning asking for your qual- ifications. If you are interested I will go down with you in the morning to see the Department and get your per- mit,” the teacher said, smiling at me. If I was interested! I could not be- lieve my good fortune. When I un- dressed that evening I felt that I was also shedding my privations and hard- ships like an old stocking. I was on my own! I realized, of course, that I was still very far from my goal, but — but from now on it was uip to me! I had been given my start. That night I fell asleep with tears of joy and gratitude wet on my cheeks. Although the teacher who had left was to have thirty dollars a month and I was to have only twenty-five dollars, I could not have been happier. Of that amount, I would give father eight dollars a month for my room and board. Not that he asked for it; I knew that was what teachers at near- by schools paid for their room and board. I would still have to walk two- and-one-half miles to school. I looked forward to teaching; look- ed forward to having a chance to handle books, read and study along

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The Icelandic Canadian

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