The Great Silkie of Sule Skerry
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The Great Silkie of Sule Skerry or The Grey Selkie of Suleskerry is Child ballad number 113, from Orkney.
[edit] Synopsis
A woman laments that she does not know her son's father. A man rises up to tell her that he is the father, and that he is a selkie: a man only on the land, a seal in the water. He takes his son, gives her a purse of gold, and predicts that she will marry a gunner, who will shoot both him and his son.
[edit] Adaptations
The British folk rock band Trees included one variant, as "The Great Silkie", in The Garden of Jane Delawney, their debut album.
Similarly, the Irish band Solas included one variant, titled "Grey Selchie", in their album The Words That Remain.
The Breton folk band Tri Yann also penned an adaptation in french called "Le Dauphin" (the dolphin) on their 1972 album Tri Yann an Naoned.
Alasdair Roberts included his version of "The Grey Silkie of Sule Skerry" on his limited-edition CD, You Need Not Braid Your Hair For Me: I Have Not Come A-Wooing, released in 2005.
In their third album, Fifth dimension (1966), The American rock band The Byrds set the poem "I Come and Stand at Every Door" by turkish poet Nazim Hikmet to the tune of "The Great Silkie". The song was later covered by Pete Seeger and This Mortal Coil.