(Arinbjorn)
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Page 156 Chapter

Arinbjorn spoke well of this work,
and said to his father that
he would be bound to atone
Egil with the king.
Thorir said,
'It will be the common verdict
that Bard got his desert in being slain;
yet hath Egil wrought too much after the way of his kin,
in looking little before him and braving a king's wrath,
which most men find a heavy burden.
However, I will atone you, Egil, with the king for this time.'

Thorir went to find the king,
but Arinbjorn remained at home and declared that one lot should befall them all.
But when Thorir came to the king, he offered terms for Egil, his own bail,
while the king should doom the fine.
King Eric was very wroth, and it was hard to come to speech with him;
he said that what his father had said would prove true—that family
would never be trustworthy.
He bade Thorir arrange it thus:
'Though I accept some atonement, Egil shall not be long harboured in my realm.
But for the sake of thy intercession, Thorir, I will take a money fine for this man.'
The king fixed such fine as he thought fit;
Thorir paid it all and went home.

'From Norway king's keeping,
From craft of Gunnhilda,
So I freed me (nor flaunt I
The feat overbold),
That three, whom but I wot not,
The warrior king's liege-men,
Lie dead, to the high hall
Of Hela downsped.'