The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.1988, Blaðsíða 17

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.1988, Blaðsíða 17
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 15 Serious — It’s Golf.16 The Art Show relates the adventures of an art lover among the masterpieces on display at a small town art show. In this piece, Paul’s sense of humor shines through to good advantage. “The names (of the pictures)” he confides, “are revealing. There is one showing a boy feeding hay to a cow, and the name of the picture is ‘Boy Feeding Hay to a Cow’ . . . And there is another one showing a dog chasing a frightened rabbit. I was impressed with the title: ‘Dog Attacking Rabbit.’ Now there was a bold sally of the imagination!”17 In some of his comments, Paul mixes just a drop or two of acid: “I don’t want to omit the spectators. After all it was for them the show was organized. Here was their opportunity to wade knee-deep in culture. They stroll about pausing here and there, smiling, frowning, chortling as they react to the strangeness before them. It is revealing to note their comments. You begin to understand their deep feeling for art. Such discriminating phrases as ‘this is nice,’ and ‘this is very nice’ and ‘this is pretty nice’ are commonly heard, but some- times someone comes up with a truly memorable gem like ‘damn good’ or some- thing equally inventive.” An essay is a sort of glass in which the reader catches sight of the author’s face — not full face, but in profile. It always strikes a personal note. Individuality is its kernel. Paul’s essays are written for the serious, but not the highly instructed PhD level. They reveal a pleasing personality. One of the stories that Paul has contrib- uted to the Icelandic Canadian is called simply “Battle.”18 It is the tale of a chess game between Hastings, a young English- man, an army captain, one of the breed, who, in E. M. Forster’s words, go forth into the world with well developed bodies, fairly developed minds and undeveloped hearts, and Sigfus Jonasson, an old Ice- landic farmer, who by virtue of native in- telligence and intellectual curiosity, with- out benefit of public school or university, has become a man of culture and educa- tion. During a snow storm, Hastings has to abandon his jeep. He seeks refuge at Jonas- son’s farm. Hastings is a member of the British occupying force in Iceland. “Only the British war office knew how many troops were sent to ‘occupy’ the island. Because the country was defenceless, the Icelandic parliament had sanctioned their presence. But the ordinary citizen was re- vulsed by the sight of foreign troops. They were a peace-loving people. They had never had an army. From the first they were sullen and unfriendly, and Hastings, put off by their coldness, regarded them with subtle disdain.” But Jonasson, one of nature’s gentlemen, knew his obligations to a stranger who makes a call on his hospitality. He says to his wife: “Friend or enemy we will treat him like a guest. He is just another human being. He has no uniform now. While he is here we will forget his allegiance.” To pass the time, Hastings challenges Jonasson to a game of chess. Jonasson wins the game handily. Hastings wants a return match. Nothing in all his experience had fitted him to appreciate such a man as his host. He under-estimated him com- pletely. “He did not know the character of the Icelandic country man. He knew noth- ing about his heritage: that he had felt the first glow of poetry in his breast as he took his mother’s milk, that many of the great sagas were in his head before he cut his first tooth, that his grandmother had brightened his dreams with the tales of fairies, elves, trolls, and outlaws throughout all his early years. His natural intelligence had been honed by careful study, and wide reading had given him broadness of mind far be- yond the common man. Almost alone, he had learned to read French and German. English he could read and speak. Danish he could read and speak flawlessly. He was

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The Icelandic Canadian

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