Egill Skallagrímsson (born c. 910, Borg, Iceland—died 990, Mosfell) was one of the greatest of Icelandic skaldic poets, whose adventurous life and verses are preserved in Egils saga (c. 1220; translated in The Sagas of Icelanders), attributed to Snorri Sturluson. The saga portrays Egill as having a dual nature derived from his mixed descent from fair, extroverted Vikings and dark, taciturn Sami (Lapps). He was headstrong, vengeful, and greedy for gold but also a loyal friend, a shy lover, and a devoted father. As a young man he killed the son of King Eiríkr Bloodaxe (Erik I) and placed a curse upon the king, which he inscribed on a pole in magic runes. Later, shipwrecked off the coast of Northumbria, England, he fell into Eiríkr’s hands (c. 948) but saved his own life by composing in a single night the long praise poem Höfuthlausn (“Head Ransom”), praising Eiríkr in a unique end-rhymed metre. Another long praise poem, Arinbjarnarkvitha (“Lay of Arinbjörn”), is also attributed to him.
Shortly after the death of two of his sons, Egill locked himself in his enclosed bed and refused food. His daughter coaxed him into writing a poem; so he composed (c. 961) the deeply personal lament Sonatorrek (“Loss of Sons,” or “Revenge Denied”). The poem is also a family portrait in which he recalls the deaths of his parents as well; in it the desire for revenge and hatred of Odin overwhelms him, but gradually he bows his head in resignation and gratitude for the poetic gift that the god has bestowed upon him. After finishing the poem, Egill resumed his normal life. He lived to be old and blind and to write a lament on his senility.