Sonatorrek

Sonatorrek ("the irreparable loss of sons") is a skaldic poem in 25 stanzas by Egill Skallagrímsson (ca. 910990). The work laments the death of two of the poet's sons, Gunnar, who died of a fever, and Böðvarr, who drowned during a storm. It is preserved in Egils saga Skalla-Grímssonar, ch. 78, which is included in the 14th-century compilation, Möðruvallabók. According to the saga, after Egill placed Böðvarr in the family burial mound, he locked himself in his bed-chamber, determined to starve himself to death. Egill’s daughter diverted him from this plan in part by convincing him to compose a memorial poem for Böðvarr, to be carved on a rune-staff.

"Sonatorrek" monument by Ásmundur Sveinsson at Borg á Mýrum.

Structure and content of the poem

Sonnatorrek is composed in kviðuháttr, a relatively undemanding meter which Egill also employed in his praise-poem, Arinbjarnarkviða. Sonatorrek’s 25 stanzas progress through seven stages:[1]

Elements of pre-Christian belief

Sonatorrek provides an unusually personal expression of Norse paganism. The poem includes some 20 allusions to Norse gods and myths, not all of which can be understood. The poet’s personification of inevitable death as the goddess Hel waiting on a headland (st. 25) is particularly striking. It has been suggested that Egill modeled Sonatorrek and his expressions of grief on the myth of Óðinn grieving for his own dead son, Baldr.[3]

Sonatorrek’s status as literature

Sonatorrek is “generally regarded as the first purely subjective lyric in the North,”[4] and has been called “a poem of unparalleled psychological depth, poetic self-awareness and verbal complexity.”[5] Several commentators have compared Sonatorrek to a theme from Goethe.[6] In Scandinavian letters, it is often regarded as the very birth of subjective poetic utterance within the native culture (Old Norse literature being seen as a common Nordic heritage).

References

  1. Following E.O.G. Turville-Petre, Scaldic Poetry (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1976; ISBN 0-19-812517-8), pp. 24-25.
  2. Lee M. Hollander (1936), p.7.
  3. Harris (2006), pp. 158-59; Harris (1994), p.174; North (1990), pp. 158-59.
  4. Peter Hallberg, Old Icelandic Poetry: Eddic Lay and Skaldic Verse (Lincoln: Univ. Nebraska Press, 1962; ISBN 0-8032-0855-3), p.136.
  5. Larrington (1992), pp. 62-63.
  6. Peter Hallberg, Ibid., p. 140; see also sources cited in K. S. Heslop (2000), p.152.

Scholarship on Sonatorrek

External links