Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1967, Side 54

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1967, Side 54
Dr. STEFÁN EINARSSON: The Poetry of Egill Skalla-Grímsson Of all the Old Icelandic poets Eg- ill Skalla-Grímsson was by far the most important. In him one can detect the characteristics of two different races. On one hand we see the splendor-loving Viking leader; on the other we notice unattractive pliysical features that could have been inherited from ancestors of the peasant or Lapp hunter type. The latter were known to be taciturn, distrustful and introvert. It is also of importance in our context that Egill Skalla-Grímsson was torn be- tween two opposing ways of life. He was a member of a community of family-conscious farmers who in their earth-bound every day life found it logical to depend on Thor, but during his life Egill was also deeply influenced by the radical and individualistic philosophy of adventurous V i k i n g s who had chosen Óðinn as their supreme god. The Vikings are known to have sacrificed the timehonored reliance upon the family for independence of action1 and bonds of friendship. Egill’s grandfather, Kveldulfr, had a streak of the berserk in his nature — and so did Skalla-Grímr, Egill’s father. But Egill’s uncle Þór- ólfr and his own brother, also by the name of Þórólfr, fitted the con- cept of the Nordic hero. Both the Þórólfrs were dazzled by the splen- dor of the rising monarchs of Nor- way, King Haraldr Hairfair and his son Eiríkr, but neither uncle nor brother were crafty or pliable enough to retain the king’s favor; the uncle was slandered by enemies and later killed by the king (Har- aldr) himself. These events com- pelled Skalla-Grímr and his family to emigrate to Iceland. Skalla-Grímr settled at Borg in Borgarfjörd where he became an excellent farmer and a mighty worker. At Borg his son Egill was born and there he grew up with his transplanted kinsfolk. As has already been implied, he inherited the dark unattractive appearance of his father and with it a crafty dis- trustful outlook upon life. He be- came a sorcerer like his Lapp an- cestors, and he inherited the inordi- nate avarice of his money-sav- ing father, the farmer. But unlike his father and grandfather he possessed the mighty urge of the Viking for adventure and travel. In this he resembled his uncle Þóiólfr. As a fighter and a stickler for law and honor Egill stopped at nothing, courting trouble wher- ever he went. At home he was a loyal member and protector of his family and behaved in' ac- cordance with the good old Ger- manic tradition. Abroad he gave his loyalty to Kings (Athelstan of Eng- land) and struck up Viking friend- ships which only death could dissolve. But to even an1 amazing
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