The Ice Museum by Joanna Kavenna

The Ice Museum by Joanna Kavenna

Author:Joanna Kavenna
Language: eng
Format: mobi, epub
Publisher: Penguin Group US
Published: 0101-01-01T00:00:00+00:00


PURITY

IN THAT UNDEFILED BRIGHT THULE,

THULE OF ETERNAL GAIN

THERE WHERE THE SOUL SEES NEWLY

FROM THE ISLES OF INATULA

TO THE GOLDEN BOWERED BEULA. . . .

IN THAT UNDEFILED BRIGHT THULE

“THRENODY. COMPOSED ON THE DEATH OF MY LITTLE BOY,” THOMAS HOLLEY CHIVERS (1809-1858)

The rain is soaking the bow of the ship and lashing the sides of the fjord. The rocks stand ancient and immeasurable on either side, plunging into the water, their granite faces reflected in the clear waters. I have been standing on the deck for hours now, looking out across the ocean. As light fades, the rain subsides, and the wind strengthens. It forces the water into irregular shapes: curves and taut lines, deep rifts. As the semi-dusk falls, the shapes begin to resemble faces—a sea of faces, grimacing and smiling in the twilight, twitching as the wind blisters the water.

The ship is an old coastal steamer, the fjords are the pride of Norway: the western fjords, stuff of a thousand holiday tours, a thousand tourist brochures. ‘The most beautiful journey in the world,’ the posters announce, ‘the journey of a lifetime.’ The sun is sinking slowly beneath the horizon. The ship moves sluggishly past the vast, high rocks, ploughing a furrow through the shape-shifting ocean. The deck is quiet; the waters are empty, the only motion the occasional blink from a lighthouse, orange flashes against the deep blue of the dusk sky.

The wind is wheezing through the gullies and fissures of the rocks; rustling through the leaves of the light birch trees, darting over the fine satin trails of slender waterfalls, tumbling from unseen heights. We are in a vibrant world of rock and trees, dulled to monochrome for the night: layer upon layer of tumbling mountains and dense green foliage, with crag mountains in the distance and thin rock spits sliding out into the fjord towards the boat. Across the water, there are the faint shadows of small houses, scattered at the base of the immense rock walls. They lie on stubby beaches, where the rocks soften into a horizontal plain, before being swallowed by the sea.

The night is cold. Everyone is below deck, except a lean old Norwegian sailor, in blue overalls, sitting further along the deck. He stares at the water, coughing and rolling a cigarette. He sits out here whenever he can, he says, in dusk shadow or bright sunlight, his hands curled around his cigarette papers, his eyes fixed on the rocks. Earlier, I thrust a map into his hands: ‘Unnskyld, hvor er vi?’ Where are we? Pointing at the map, he coughed: ‘Vi er her.’ We are here. We are in the continuously shifting ‘here’ of the voyage north. We are on the way to Thule, as Nansen saw it, as the Nazis colonized and burned it, as the contemporary tours slide past it on slow-moving ships. In Norway the twentieth century unfurls a series of layers. Nansen’s sense of his country as a beautiful land. The Nazi fantasy about a pure Aryan race, and the northern lands they thought had formed it.



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