The Icelandic connection - 01.03.2018, Page 44

The Icelandic connection - 01.03.2018, Page 44
42 ICELANDIC CONNECTION Vol. 70 # I died and another has been taken from her and fostered out to another family. There are five children at home that need to be fed and clothed. The husband is a drunk and for married women there is little work to be had outside the home in the town. Borunn Kristjansdottir then has to rely on her husband’s earnings and increasingly on the support from the town. But most of all, Borunn relies on the hand and the help of Almighty God. Her belief in the Almighty is strong and unyielding. - “The Bible is the book of all books”, sais Borunn, and teaches her children the sign of the cross and to say their prayers. But she also has a great deal of admiration for literature and verse and enjoys discussing poets and poetry with her friends. Maybe she teaches her children poetry by her relative, Jonas Hallgrimsson. And unbeknownst to her, she has borne a new poet for the Icelandic nation, a poet who will often look for his pleasure and peace of mind through drinking. Eins og Bor er J>orstlatur - j?ar um frastt get rekka verda sjorinn J>a mun jjur j^egar eg haetti ad drekka. Like Thor who was always of thirst, This is what I am thinking. The seas would empty first, Before I finally quit my drinking. We will run over the younger years of our story’s hero here, his schooling and confirmation, in order to hurry this story along, but early on, Kristjan Niels begins to take on all the casual labour that he can find that was on offer for young men in the town. His father is more and more unable to take care of family’s needs and continues to look to the town’s authorities for assistance. He still owns the house in which the family lives but that was given as security for the ever increasing loans from the town council. Then the foundation of the home is taken from the family. There is a heavy storm cloud hovering over the little house on the bay. The woman of the house, Borunn Kristjansdottir, becomes bedridden and does not recover. She is taken from her five children when her death occurs on the 28th of March 1873. Kristjan Niels is the oldest, going on to his fifteenth year and Rosa Sigrfdur the youngest, only two years old. In the newspaper, Nordanfari, Borunn is eulogized with these words: “she had been blesses with a strong personality; and I believe had all the qualities that a good woman should have”. At the death of Borunn Kristjansdottir, the household is split up .Jon the blacksmith sells the house and the children are fostered out to various good folks. At Jodisarstadir in eastern Eyjafjordur there is a man, David Kristjansson who farmed half the property. To that farm, the fourteen year old Kristjan Niels Jonsson is directed. David is his maternal uncle. Kristjan Niels spends two years at the home of David Kristjansson then from 1875 to 1878 he is a farm labourer at Helgarsel in Gardsardalur. The otherwise childless couple who takes him in there were Eirikur Johannesson and Sigurbjorg Davidsdottir. North of Bvera and lower in the valley at the farmstead Brom fives Gudlaugur, a brother to Eirikur. There are a lot of interactions between these two farms and the son of the Brom farmer, Kristinn Gudlaugsson, is well aware of an old gentleman who has taken to his cot and is going to end his fife there under the roof of Eirikur the farmer at Helgarsel. The old fellow is well fed as Eirikur is relatively well off and is generous and friendly enough when he is at home very reserved in the broader community and felt there had been little value to all he has done in his fife. Sigurbjorg his wife is in her in her fifties, of poor health and old

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