The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1981, Síða 15

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1981, Síða 15
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 13 concerning her burial. When she felt that her end was near, she invited her friends and relatives to a great feast which lasted for three days. At this time she gave expensive gifts to her guests, and free advice to anyone interested. At one point she declared that from then on the assemblage would engage in her own funeral feast, because she would soon die. This came to pass. She was buried on the seacoast at high water mark, because, says the record: “having been baptized, she did not want to lie in unconsecrated ground. ” A princess, a queen, the owner of a whole municipality, she died a pauper without a plot of ground for her burial, but had her body confined to the sand and the sea. There has been much speculation con- cerning the significance of this burial place. Was this simply the manifestation of the eccentricity of an old woman? How could the ebb and flow of the sea compensate her for the lack of consecrated ground? Perhaps she calculated that since the sea touches the shores of all lands, she would somehow be brought into contact with the world com- munity of Christians in this manner. Or was it an act of purification after the manner of Christ’s baptism in water? Or was she “deepminded” enough to envision her Christian faith which had been temporarily submerged by the heathenism of her con- temporaries, as being washed ashore with the tide of Providence and spreading to conquer and bless the land? We shall never know what she had in mind, but this we know, that Audur Ketilsdottir was the first famous woman in Iceland’s history. She was a princess, a pathfinder, a puritan, and yet a pauper in the midst of all her posses- sions. II. HALLGERDUR HOSKULDSDOTTIR — THE UNTAMED SHREW Hallgerdur is the most wicked woman in Njal’s Saga, Iceland’s most famous story. A thoughtful reader will marvel at the imagin- ative powers of the writer of this story, his creative skill, and his simple narrative style. He shakes persons, such as you have never met, so to speak, out of a hat, makes them engage in conversations such as you have never heard, and all this with masterful simplicity so that you are apt to think you are actually reading a true story. There may, indeed, have been a Hallgerdur in the centuries old tradition which the writer wove into his story of Njall and he created her in the image desired by endow- ing her with all the worst traits in human character, and making her the scapegoat of a large catalogue of crimes. The reader9is prepared for this extraordinary career in the opening chapter of Njal’s saga, when we are introduced to Hallgerdur as a tall beauti- ful girl, with silken hair so long that it hung down to her waist. Her father is exceedingly proud of her as she is playing on the floor, and he asks a visiting relative what he thinks of her. This relative remarks coldly: “I can not imagine how thief’s eyes have come into our kin. ” It is difficult to imagine how any man in right mind would make a remark like that about a child. This little girl was not a child of a miserable crofter whom one could insult at will. Her father was one of the great chieftains of the age, a close friend of kings and potentates, and her mother was also prominent in the society of that day. Com- mon sense would rule out a remark of this nature, but the author is creating a Hallger- dur of his own making. He is going to make her a thief and an untamable shrew and endow her with all the hatred, maliciousness and the murderous rage of the age. Giving her “thief’s eyes” was a good beginning, preparing the reader for what is to come. Although impetuous and wilfull, Hall- gerdur is married early, without consulta- tion in the matter and against her will. She resents this, as well as the arrogance and overbearing attitude of her husband. The marriage is miserable from the beginning,

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The Icelandic Canadian

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