The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.1988, Síða 18

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.1988, Síða 18
16 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SPRING, 1988 also a master of his mother tongue. Since he was four years old he played chess and had studied the game assiduously. He felt no disgrace at being a farmer who stepped in dung every day. He kept his eyes uplifted to Elsja, the fabled mountain, whose deep purple always gave promise of God and better days. Because Hastings knew none of those things he was not prepared for the old sheep farmer’s play.” Jonasson accepts Hasting’s challenge for a second game. “The game went on: two strong men locked in the silent clash of wills. Hastings broke out in a sweat. His imagination told him he could not lose, but reality impinged on his brain. He knew deep down he was gradually, mercilessly, being forced to yield. An old sheep farmer from an unknown island was pressing hard to undo him.” I am not going to tell you how the game ends. If you want to know, you must read the story. It will be a rich experience. “Battle” is not just another competent machine-made story. It is a good story. All the details play their significant part. The atmosphere is authentic, the dialogue is natural. It is well balanced. It moves with a steady pace from its opening to its end. A good beginning is strengthened by a good ending. It merits a place among memorable Canadian short stories. Music has always meant a great deal in Paul’s life. He never had any professional training as a musician but, when he was growing up, he was saturated with music and song. He learned his notes with his letters. He taught himself to play the piano by watching how others did it. He has written some 300 songs which range over three fields — the popular, the serious and the religious. Four of his songs have been published — “Sara’s Carol,” “This is the Homeland that I love,” “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee” and “This is the Love.” He has written the words and music of a children’s operetta, also a three act musical comedy. He has never lived on a Fantasy Island level. He is down to earth. He knows that there is no comforting escape from reality. He realizes, with Wordsworth: “But in the very world, which is the world of all of us, — the place where, in the end we find our happiness, or not at all.” Deep in memory’s hold, I suspect that Paul Sigurdson has many pleasant memo- ries stored away; that, through the years, he has been able to extract much happiness from life; that he has found many meaning- ful satisfactions. May I name three: First there has been the love, and the compan- ionship, of his wife. Second, his pride in his family of five children — Signy, Stephen, Gus, Sara and Sylvia. Third, the delights he has found in his own mind and in crea- tive labor. Since, as a small boy, he scrib- bled with a short pencil on odd scraps of paper, Paul has always enjoyed writing. He has never been on an assembly line. He has never written against time, under a feeling of compulsion, but only when the spirit moved him. “The delights of creativity are highly rewarding,” he once said, “and very often creative energy is self-rejuvenating.” He never let the act of writing become a burden to him.19 He has always lived on good terms with nature. He has always preferred the country to the city. The outdoors has a fascination for him. When he retired from school teaching, he built a house, swiftly converted into a home, a few miles east of Morden on a truly beautiful site. His home nestles among low undulating hills which give the lie to the libel that Manitoba is all flat prairie. From his front porch, in summer, he can watch the flowers in bloom in his wife’s garden, and, winter and summer, he can feed a great variety of wild birds whom he looks upon as friends. With the years, Paul has grown steadily in depth. Now in his sixty-first year, he gives no sign of any intellectual stagnation.

x

The Icelandic Canadian

Beinleiðis leinki

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: The Icelandic Canadian
https://timarit.is/publication/1976

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.