The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Side 76

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Side 76
74 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER 1973 were 1440 guests. It was an age of violence, with much fighting. Nevertheless, there were men of peace who deplored bloodshed. The people were notably hospitable. Three instances are mentioned where a settler built a hall across the road- way, with tables always laid for travel- lers. Clothes of the well-to-do were rich and colorful. The Hjaltasons arrived at an assembly so elegantly dressed that the people thought that the Gods had come, (s-207). Women had a respected and often prominent position in the home and the community. At the lower end of the scale were some concubines and bondwomen. A Commonwealth. An aristocratic- democratic commonwealth evolved. First after settlement there were dist- itric assemblies, then assemblies for each Quarter. Finally, in 930 AT)., a national assembly, Althing, was form- ed, with a code of laws and a law- speaker to preside, and a law-court. Political power was shared by 39 chief- tains, but commoners were represent- ed. Not an armed force but a common law and Althing gave the country co- hesion. The Icelandic people had a poetic imagination, as is revealed in the poetry and occasional verse quoted, and in the nicknames universally as- signed, concrete, biting, descriptive; e.g. Ljot the Unwashed. There are numerous examples of clairvoyance, premonition, and second sight. Super- stitious beliefs included sorcery, ghosts and omens. The translation is true to the origin- al. The style is natural, simple, con- cise. In appearance the book is beauti- ful, including paper, print, colored landscape and maps. It is a veritable work of art. The Book of Settlements is a valu- ablet addition to our Canadian liter- ature. The Book of Settlements was published to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the founding of a Chair of Icelandic Language and Literature at the University of Manitoba. Its publication was supported by organiz- ations within the Manitoba Icelandic com- munity. —The Alumni Journal, University of Manitoba -30- LIFE’S MANY MOODS by Solveig Sveinsson Vantage Press, New York, 1971 243 pp. $3.95 “I glanced at the clock. It was quitting time. Thank goodness! I had no idea why I was so tired today. So anxious for -the day to be done. As a rule I was not a clock watcher and I detested those who were. And why should I ever become one? Even if just for this one day. “Everyone knew that I loved my job. Loved the school and all the children I patiently struggled with day after day and year after year. All my friends knew that I was born an old maid—a born schoolteacher that just loved teaching other women’s kids,, not caring in the least that none of them were mine. “Oh, well. Most of the time I thought exactly that too . . . but this morning . . .” The speaker of the opening words in the story was Katherine Haggard. Was she really a -born old maid? Does the story as it unfolds show something else? We soon learn of her deep-felt love for a young man, “the young God to her simple -heart’’. What caused the tragedy in her life? How did she face

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