The Icelandic connection - 01.03.2018, Side 10

The Icelandic connection - 01.03.2018, Side 10
8 ICELANDIC CONNECTION Vol. 70 #1 He lived there until he was eighteen. In 1878, he immigrated to the west. At first, he lived in Winnipeg and then moved on to Duluth. Finally, in 1893, he moved to the Thingvalla area of North Dakota. He never married and had no descendants. His education was mostly self-taught and he had very little formal education before leaving Iceland. Kainn labored for most of his adult life in the northeast North Dakota rural community called Eyford, which is in Thingvalla Township. Many of the graves in the Thingvalla Cemetery were dug by him and he was the last grave-digger to live in the Eyford community. The following is taken from an old newspaper: “He went at his task as if he were making up a bedfora tiredfriend, said his close friend, Dr. Rognvaldur Petursson, and most of those buried there were the poet's personal friends. Here he, too, rests now on the grassy flat, with a small stone at his head. But at the side of the church stands a stately monument with his likeness carved into it. It was placed there by the friends and admirers of K.N. in the United States and Canada, but designed by the neighbors, who thankfully remember the poet whose gentle humor lightened their burdens and eased their struggles for half a century, brought sunshine into their homes, and was an ever active geysir of fin and easy, original wit. Poor as he was in terms of material possessions, K.N. enriched these communities and set their cultural atmosphere as no other man has. ” K. N. Julius was a unique, beloved poet and humorist. Some of his poems became published in two books. The original book, Kvidlingar, was published in 1920. Kvidlingar og Kvcedi (Ditties and Poems) was published in 1945 and edited by Richard Beck. In 1937, a book in Iceland was published called Rabb um K. N. og Kvedskap bans by Magnus Gfslason. In 1965, a book called Visnabok Kains / Kristjan Niels Jonsson (K. N.) was produced by Tomas Gudmundsson in Iceland. In the 14 Aug 1946 edition of the Heimskringla,you can find an advertisement selling New Books by the Bjornsson Book Store. K.N.’s book, Kvidlingar, is for sale at $15.85 and is one of the most expensive books listed. That would be over $210 in the 2017 value of the dollar. A large monument, dedicated to K.N. Julius, was built on the north side of the church in 1936. The inscription on the monument to K.N. reads: In Icelandic: Kimnisskaldid (by Richard. Beck) Faeddur til ad faekka tarum. fair munu betur syngja.

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