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- From: betsys@cs.umb.edu (Elizabeth Schwartz)
- Newsgroups: rec.music.folk,soc.culture.celtic
- Subject: Re: The Great Selkie of Sule Skerrie
- Message-ID: <BETSYS.92Dec29145805@ra.cs.umb.edu>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 19:58:05 GMT
- References: <1gettcINN9fi@agate.berkeley.edu> <1gibdsINNphr@agate.berkeley.edu>
- <BETSYS.92Dec25230247@ra.cs.umb.edu>
- <1992Dec29.152733.9013@gssec.bt.co.uk>
- Sender: news@cs.umb.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Massachusetts at Boston
- Lines: 33
- In-Reply-To: agauld@gssec.bt.co.uk's message of 29 Dec 92 15: 27:33 GMT
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-
- Thanks! Hmmm, I don't think I've ever heard any Norwegian songs. With
- all the seas and mountains and months of dark weather .... I'd bet
- they have some good ones!
-
- I like the first version of the Silkie song better. Singing that the
- silkie and son were killed makes it a simple tragedy. Singing it as a
- prophecy, that he knows he will be killed and she beleives him, makes
- it a cry against Fate, I think. I picture her singing after the Silkie
- and her son have swum out to sea, perhaps sitting on a rock way out on
- a point of land, perhaps unwilling to return to shore and meet the man
- who waits for her there....
- I guess that's why the song stays in my head. It is so simple and so
- stark....
- Also, the song figured in the James Michener book "The Drifters,"
- which is a novel about six different young people travelling through
- Europe in the Sixties. One of the characters is a Norwegian seeking
- sunlight, one is an American singer of the Child ballads, one is a
- Californian draft dodger, one a radical Black from inner-city
- Pittsburgh, one a spoilt African daughter of a British colonial, and
- the last a hero of the six-day war who has to choose between Israeli
- and American citizenship. They end up travelling to Pamplona and to
- Marrakesh in a VW "pop-top" camper. Oh, and the "narrator," a Swiss
- businessman who sees all six from a tower of finance and traditional
- work-ethics....it is an interesting story. Not a "great" book, but
- the characters and the songs did stay with me.
-
-
-
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