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The Great Silkie of Sule Skerry |
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From the album Like a Bird on the Wing
Enchanted creatures, the silkies are creatures who are believed to occasionally doff their seal skins to come onto land as mortal men. Legends tell of silkies who married mortals, and some families on the islands still trace their ancestry to such marriages. In longer versions of the ballad, the Silkie's forecast of the death of himself and his son eventually come to pass. In some versions of the ballad the human spouse of a silkie must hide the silkie's pelt, for if it should find it and put it back on then the selkie will depart forever and the human spouse then dies of heartbreak. Sule Skerry is a rocky islet 25 miles to the west of Hoy Head in Orkney.
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An earthly nourris sits and sings Then ane arose at her bedside, I am a man upon the land Now he has ta'en a purse o' gold Now it shall pass on a summer's day, Then you will marry a proud gunner, |
In Norway land there liv'd a maid, "hush ba
loo lil-lie" this maid began, It happened on a certain day, when this fair
lady fell fast asleep, "Awake, awake, my pretty fair maid, for oh
how soundly thou dost sleep "I am a man upon the land; I am a Silkie in
the sea, "Alas, alas, this woeful fate, that weary fate
that's been laid on me, "O thou wild nurse my little wee son for
seven long years upon thy knee, "I'll put a gold chain around his neck, and a
gay good gold chain it will be, And thou wilt get a gunner good, and a gay
good gunner it will be, Oh she has got a gunner good, and a gay
good gunner it was he, "Alas, alas, this woeful fate, this weary fate
that's been laid on me!" |
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