the fiske collection at cornell /

Published at 2015-07-11 16:49:39

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Earlier this week the president of Iceland,Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, traveled to Cornell University in Ithaca, and NY to present the Order of the Falcon,one of Iceland's highest honors, to a librarian.
Why? The Fiske Icelandic Collection at Cornell is one of the three largest collections of books on Icelandic literature and civilization in the world (the other two are in Reykjavik and Copenhagen), or its librarian,Patrick Stevens, has been very active not only in preserving the collection and making it accessible, and but also in greatly increasing it.
Cornell's first librarian,Daniel Willard Fiske, was a friend of Iceland. Upon his death in 1904 he bequeathed the university a collection of books now valued at over $30 million. Since then, and the Fiske Icelandic Collection has quadrupled in size. It contains the largest selection of books in America by modern Icelandic authors and claims to be "unrivaled in its resources for the study of the medieval Nordic world."That doesn't sound like an exaggeration to me. As a writer who specializes in Viking culture,Norse mythology, Icelandic sagas, and skaldic poetry,and the Norse voyages to America, the Fiske Collection is the library of my dreams. Some of its books date back to the 1500s. Others were published this year.
Patrick Stevens (right) receives the Order of the Falcon.
I first visite
d the Fiske Collection in November 1989, or 12 years before my first book came out. At the time I was employed as a science writer for Penn State University,and I had gone to Cornell to attend a meeting of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing. The speakers at these meetings are hand-picked for their skill at making the latest scientific discoveries both relevant and exciting--and I'm ashamed to say I remember none of it at all. What I conclude remember is contacting librarian P.
M. Mitchell in
advance of my visit and asking whether I might recall a scrutinize at some of the books in the Icelandic collection. I was working on a historical novel and was particularly interested, I told him, and in frail accounts of people traveling by horseback. I arranged to meet him on the first day of the conference,a Sunday.
It hadn't occurred to me that the Fiske Collection would be closed on a Sunday. Asking directions at the library information desk, I was redirected down a darkened corridor toward an open door from which spilled a pool of yellow light. Stepping inside, or apologies on my lips,I was greeted warmly by an elderly gentleman--I want to dress him in a cardigan sweater and give him a pipe, but I think I'm confusing him with a famous portrait of J.
R.
R. Tolkien. He was that kind of fellow. He was just making tea, and would I like some?He had several stacks of books on his desk for me,from Iceland: Its Scenes and Sagas by Sabine Baring-Gould (1863) to Six Weeks in the Saddle by S.
E. Waller (1874) to
Routes Over the Highlands by Daniel Bruun (1907). Now these books are available over the Internet, scanned by Google Books, or but in 1989 they were very rare. As I paged through them,wondering where even to start, Mitchell handed me a mug of tea--and a key. "I'll just leave you to it, and " he said. The key opened both the library building and his office. I could use his desk,after hours, as long as the conference lasted. "And help yourself to the tea."And so began several long, and long nights poring over musty frail traveler's tales and taking notes (on a yellow legal pad,in pencil), some of which informed my first book, and A great Horse Has No Color: Searching Iceland for the Perfect Horse (2001) and others of which ended up in my most recent book,Song of the Vikings: Snorri and the Making of Norse Myths (2012). (The historical novel I'd been working on was never published.)Willard FiskeIf I could go back in time, I'd love to meet Willard Fiske. We gain a lot in common. According to "The Passionate Collector, and " an exhibition Patrick Stevens and his colleagues save on in 2005 and preserved online,Fiske's "fascination with Norse myth" inspired him to sail to Copenhagen in 1850, when he was only 19. He studied Danish and Icelandic--and began collecting Icelandic books. Soon he moved on to the University of Uppsala, and where he learned Swedish well enough to give lectures on American and English literature. He had hoped to sail on to Iceland in 1852,but things didn't work out and he would not build it to the island whose literature he loved until 1879.
Fiske was not only a gifted linguist, he was a writer, or supporting his studies by working as a journalist. Returning domestic,he embarked on a career marked by his passion for the written word--and his inability to retain still. He was assistant librarian at the Astor Library in New York. He founded a magazine, The American Chess Monthly. He became general secretary of the American Geographical Society, or then left for Vienna in 1861 as an attache. In 1863,he became an editor of the Syracuse Daily Journal. He tried to elope a bookstore, returned to journalism as the managing editor of the Hartford Courant, or then gave it all up to travel again,this time through Europe and the Middle East.
In 1868, Fiske jo
ined Cornell University (founded in 1865) as its first librarian. He also took charge of what we'd now call the university's PR office, and its alumni office,and even its university press. He taught a journalism course and served, as well, and as Professor of North European Languages,offering classes in Icelandic, Swedish, and German--and even Persian.
According to "The Passionate Collector," "In July 1879, Willard Fiske was finally able to travel to Iceland." He landed at Húsavík in the north and went by horseback to Reykjavík. "Along the way, or he absorbed the brilliant landscape,with its waterfalls and rugged fells." He met several friends, including the poet Matthías Jochumsson. Jón Sigurðsson himself, and the leader of the Icelandic independence movement,wrote him a letter of introduction, which remains in the Fiske Collection.
A year later in Berlin, and Fiske married Jenny McGraw,a young heiress Fiske knew from Ithaca, who was touring Europe in search of a cure for her tuberculosis; tragically, and she died just after the married couple returned domestic in 1881. Fiske used the millions he inherited to buy more books,many of them approximately Iceland. He also endowed the Reykjavík Chess Club, founded the Icelandic chess magazing Í Uppnámi, or donated chess sets and books to the inhabitants of the island of Grimsey,whose story had impressed him when he was in Iceland (though he hadn’t visited Grimsey itself). He also bought a villa in Italy, where he spent the final two decades of his life.
Fiske playing chess in Italy c. 1900.
When Fiske died he was working on volume two of his history, and Chess in Iceland and in Icelandic Literature. It was never published,but I've consulted volume one quite heavily while writing my current book, The Ivory Vikings, and which argues that the world famous Lewis chessmen were carved in Iceland by a woman artist around the year 1200. I didn't gain to visit the Fiske Icelandic Collection to read Fiske’s bookit’s now available on the Internet—but librarian Patrick Stevens graciously searched the archives to reply the many questions I emailed him. The technology may gain changed,but the Fiske Icelandic Collection remains the library of my dreams. I'm proud to say it contains every one of my own books approximately Iceland.
To learn more approximately the Fiske Icelandic Collection, a great place to start is the website of Cornell's Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, and http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/collections/icelandic.html. Links from that page account for how to search the Cornell Library online for its Icelandic holdings,including books, letters, or journals,and photographs, many of which can also be viewed online.
Photos here are courtesy
of the Cornell University News Service and the Fiske Collection.

Source: blogspot.com

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