The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.1988, Page 25

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.04.1988, Page 25
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 23 most of the windows faced the river. The main doors were on the south side, and on the north a staircase with handrails led upstairs. Underneath half the house was a cellar which had at first been deep but had now collapsed and was never used. From two or three places outside, it was possible to crawl under the house (under the muddy beams) into holes which had been formed by the pressure of the flood in the spring of 1882 and had not yet been filled in or covered up. The wind blew in there under the floor and howled mournfully, often keeping awake the people who lived up- stairs. No one had lived downstairs since the house began to lean. The windows were nailed shut and the doors were locked. My cousin and I walked up the stairs into the crooked house. The stairs led up to the balcony and the platform in front of the entrance. They creaked and rattled and the handrail trembled as we mounted. Along the length of the upstairs was a narrow, dark passageway which had six rooms on one side and five on the other. In between the second and third rooms on the south, the side which had only five rooms, was a space approximately ten feet in width. There had once been a stair leading up from the hall downstairs. Now boards were nailed over the opening and various kinds of rubbish were stored in that corner. On the roof was a small window which let in the only light when the rooms were closed. Everything pointed to the fact that very little care was given to the house. The hall had certainly not been whitewashed for a very long time. The plaster had fallen off the wall here and there, and where it had not fallen out, it had yellow streaks and cracks and small stains everywhere. Most of the doors were off their hinges and locks were broken or something else was wrong. I could see immediately that only the poor lived here and that the rent would be especially low. Of course, I found out very quickly that it was indeed so. All who lived there were newcomers to this land. They were poor day-labourers, the Cinder- ellas of mankind, men and women, who had probably, in one way or another, suf- fered the shipwreck of their hopes and had, in their own land, been defeated in the endless battle for every crust of bread. “These are my rooms,” said my cousin. She pointed to four doors on the left side as one entered the hall. Then she showed me the rooms. They were all quite clean and bright and the windows looked out on the river. But the plaster on the walls was broken in many places and in some had fallen off. Mother and daughter had one room as their bedroom, another was used as a kitchen, pantry and laundry, the third was the dining and living room. The three men whom Solrun called her boarders slept in the fourth room. “It is now five-thirty,” said my cousin. “I must hurry to prepare the evening meal as my boarders will soon be home.” In a few minutes, she had changed clothes, made a fire in the stove and had begun to prepare the meal. She beckoned me to a chair in the kitchen and although she had much to do and was in constant motion about the room, she never stopped talking. She told me why she and her late husband tore themselves away from a good farm in Iceland in the spring of 1874 and moved to Kinmount, Ontario, and how it came about that they left there for New Iceland the next year. She told me of all the disasters that befell her during the two years she spent in a remote log cabin in the bush. There she lost her husband and two sons, all from smallpox. She told me how she and her daughter managed to get away from there to Winnipeg, and how, after she arrived there, she had to struggle along to make a living for the two of them, and how she had triumphed over all hard- ships and had now set aside so much money that she would soon be able to invest in a small property on Point Doug-

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The Icelandic Canadian

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