The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1982, Qupperneq 18

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1982, Qupperneq 18
16 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER, 1982 the top. Can praise go any higher? And in the light of this praise, consider the fact. When the Sagas were being composed the population of Iceland was somewhere be- tween 50,000 and 80,000. The first census was taken in Iceland in 1703. It showed the population of the country to be 50,330. There had been a falling off in population since the thirteenth century — but by what amount is conjecture. An English poet, a later-day Viking, W. E. Henley claimed to be the master of his fate and the captain of his soul. The early Viking never made such a claim. He was the captain of his soul but he never pre- sumed to be the master of his fate. As he saw it, he was the blind fool of fate, the slave of circumstance. He lived under sealed orders. It was his destiny to obey these orders to the letter. His life was a broad highway, stretching its length before him, and whether it led uphill or downhill, through pleasant meadows or treacherous swamps, he had to follow it to the very end. What was in his complete control was his attitude to whatever fate had in store for him. He took the best, or the worst, that fate had to offer with equal grace. Good conduct, conduct which enabled him to keep his self-respect, was his constant aim. He never expected a reward for his good conduct, in this life, or a future life. He did good, as he saw it, for good was good to do. For want of a better phrase, he had a sense of style, which was reflected in his attitude to death; death, which passes no one by, the final fatal blow that fate can strike. He accepted life as a prelude to death. “Death it is true,” says Professor Gwyn Jones, “was not to be sought, but it was not to be avoided either, if by avoid- ance a man lessened his own stature.” Professor Jones offers an example, of what I have called the Vikings’ ‘sense of style’. In the saga of Erik the Red, brief mention is made of Bjami Grimolfsson’s calm accept- ance of the destiny that fate had designed for him. He was a sea captain. His ship ran VIKING FIND OF THE CENTURY This century’s most important find of Viking Age gold and silver jewelry, was the description applied by the head of the University Museum of Antiquities in Oslo, Arne Skjolsvold, to the recent discovery in south Norway of about 2.5 kg of jewelry believed to date from approximately to year 800. The objects, which were discovered by a man working on the site for his new house, included twisted silver necklaces, rings and pendants, large bracelets of twisted gold, beautifully worked filigree brooches and gold rings. In times of unrest, it was customary for the Vikings to bury their valuable objects in expectation of more peaceful conditions, and this discovery confirms that this prac- tice was normal in Norway as early as the year 800. Another interesting feature of these objects is that they are inscribed with runic lettering, three names being clearly identi- fiable. The Viking treasure has now been safely deposited in the vault of the University Museum of Antiques in Oslo. It will short- ly be thoroughly examined by experts and, hopefully, put on public exhibition in the not too distant future. —Courtesy of Scandinavian News

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