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- Newsgroups: rec.music.folk
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!torn!nott!cunews!freenet.carleton.ca!Freenet.carleton.ca!aa478
- From: aa478@Freenet.carleton.ca (Paul Shuttle)
- Subject: Re: The Great Selkie of Sule Skerrie
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.041913.3425@freenet.carleton.ca>
- Sender: news@freenet.carleton.ca (News Administrator)
- Organization: National Capital Freenet, Ottawa, Canada
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 04:19:13 GMT
- Lines: 42
-
-
- In reply to article <BztzI6.2o0@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu> by
- ntaib@silver.ucs.indiana.ed
- u (Iskandar Taib), which asked:
- >
- > OK... So whats a "Selkie"?
- >
- walker@sun.soe.clarkson.edu writes that:
- >
- > A "seal" that can take on a human form
- > (They are both male and female)
- > To entrap a real human
- >
-
- I agree with this, although I am familiar only with two versions
- of the song which refer to "The Great Silkie" of "Sule Skerry".
- Etymologically speaking, "Selkie" would support Walker's
- interpretation. However, I am not certain that there is any
- ill intent to "entrap" real humans. After all, the Silkie in the
- song allows himself to be killed by his lover's future husband --
- to ensure her happiness? Also, the intermarriage the song
- alludes to indicates that the distinction between a Silkie and
- a "real" human is not as clear as might be presumed. Albert
- Friedman's _Viking_Book_of_Folk_Ballads_ states that:
-
- [Silkies are] enchanted creatures, they dwell in the
- depths of the seas, but they occassionally come on land,
- after doffing their sealskins, and pass as ordinary men.
- Many families in the Scottish Islands trace their ancestry
- to Sealmen, and because of a totemic taboo, will not
- taste seal meat.
-
- Paul Shuttle aa478@Freenet.carleton.ca
- --
- _______________________________________________________
- _____ aa478@ncf.carle.ot.ca (Paul Shuttle) -
- ______________________________________________________
-