The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2009, Blaðsíða 38

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2009, Blaðsíða 38
180 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 62 #3 Short Story Taking Root by Simone Renee Morin The original version of this short story was published in the 1997 program for Manitoba’s Icelandic Festival (Islendingadagurinn) and has now been revised and updated as of2009. There was a billow in the curtain of time. When I was a child you could find that billow down at the end of King Street in Riverton, Manitoba, in a place called, Lundi. It was the home of my amma and afi, Pauline and Earl Dahlman, and it was a special place like no other in my world, in a realm all of its own, where cottonwoods rained downy tufts and caragana hedges sweetened the air. Artesian water flowed endlessly - surely by magic in my child’s mind, and from dawn until dusk the birds clustered near, singing a jubilee. This special place became a well-loved homeland of many members of my family, along with Vidivellir to the north, which our family owned for over 100 years until my great uncle, Gilbert Guttormsson, passed away in 2009. Both homesteads are still considered by many as the true hearth of our family. Although bodies have relo- cated across Canada, hearts still beat in Riverton. Storms unleashed beyond Lundi’s bor- ders seemed to gentle into showers the closer that they drew. The weather was always good - at least as far as I can remember. Fresh-scented grass, dewy and soft, pillowed my head as I watched the shape-shifting clouds roll on through. I imagined ancestral ghosts liked to linger and revisit with fondness. In my mind’s eye, I could see these ghosts of Icelandic pioneers, together with the spirits of the Indians from the nearby Nes Cemetery and Sandy Bar, all of them fluttering by, respectful and reverent, tiptoeing in protec- tive vigilance of the land and its people. The past screamed out to me at Lundi. My people used to gather there - and still did in the old photographs papering the walls. There was no television through which the outer world could invade, and no phone to jangle us back to reality. The clapboard outhouse, ancient and weathered gray, stood time’s test like few other things do today. Thankfully, a toilet roll came to sit upon the shelf replacing the old Eaton's catalogs and outdated telephone pages that we used as toilet paper during penny- pinching times. I’ll never forget my moth- er showing me how to crumple, rub, and ‘uncrumple’ the pages so as to soften them before use. I thought she was surely the kindest person for showing me that trick while she said proudly, “Icelanders know how to economize.” There were chamber pots under every bed and the only sinks were basins. The running water flowed not through pipes, but, from a well outside. The water splashed over the sides of pails, sloshing icily on bare feet, as we children raced des- perately for the porch, trying to get there before our straining arms spilled even more water than they carried back. Although the house in Riverton was small, it was a Great-Grand-Daddy of a house all the same, aged and flogged by time. Never stately, yet bearing its disrepair like a badge of perseverance. Unheated, a summerhouse is all that it could be in those last few seasons. Yet, it is so much more in memories and in dreams; least of which it is the place I think of as my home, even though I only visited and never lived there
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