Delkiow Sivy ("Strawberry Leaves" in Cornish (Kernewek)) is a Cornish folk song.
A young maiden is on her way to pick strawberry leaves which, so the song alleges, make young girls pretty. She meets a travelling tailor, who seeks to seduce her. "Who will clothe the child?" asks the young man. "Ah, but his father will be a tailor," the maiden concludes. The repeated refrain "fair face and yellow hair" probably alludes to the traditional view of female beauty.[1]
The original 'Late' Cornish version of "Delyow Syvy" can be found in both Inglis Gundry's 1966 Canow Kernow: Songs and Dances from Cornwall and in Peter Kennedy's 1997 Folksongs of Britain and Ireland. It has been suggested that the song is a Cornish version of the song "Sweet Nightingale".[2]
In her 2011 book Celtic Myth and Religion, Paice MacLeod claims that there are no surviving traditional Cornish songs and that the song was borrowed from England and sung in Cornish.[1] A Unified Cornish version titled "Delyo Syvy" appears, however, on the 1975 Sentinel Records album Starry-Gazey Pie, by Cornish folk singer Brenda Wootton, with accompaniment by Robert Bartlett.[3] The sleeve notes claim that the song is "the only living remnant" of the Cornish language and that it "has never been translated into English".[2]
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Lyrics
editDelkiow Sivy (Modern Cornish)
Peleah ero why a moaz, moze fettow teag
Gen agoz pedn due ha goz bleaw mellin?
- Me a moaz than venton sarra wheag
- Rag delkiow sivy ra muzzy teag
Pe ve moaz gena why moze fettow teag
Gen agoz pedn due ha goz bleaw mellin?
- Grew mar meno why sarra wheag
- Rag delkiow sivy ra muzzy teag
Fatla gwra ve agoz gurra why en doar
Gen agoz pedn due ha goz bleaw mellin?
- Me vedn saval arta sarra wheag
- Rag delkiow sivy ra muzzy teag
Fatla gwra ve agoz dry why gen floh
Gen agoz pedn due ha goz bleaw mellin?
- Me vedn e thone sarra wheag
- Rag delkiow sivy ra muzzy teag
Pew vedo why gawas rag seera rag goz floh
Gen agoz pedn due ha goz bleaw mellin?
- Why ra boaz e seera, sarra wheag
- Rag delkiow sivy ra muzzy teag
Pandra vedo why geel rag ledno rag goz floh
Gen agoz pedn due ha goz bleaw mellin?
- E seera veath troher sarra wheag
- Rag delkiow sivy ra muzzy teag
Delyow Sevi (Kernewek Kemmyn)
Ple'th esowgh-hwi ow-mos, mowes vludh ha teg
Gans agas bejeth gwynn, ha'gas blew melyn?
- My a vynn mos dhe'n venten, syrra hweg
- Rag delyow sevi a wra mowesi teg.
A allav-vy mos genowgh hwi, mowes, vludh ha teg
Gans agas bejeth gwynn, ha'gas blew melyn?
- Gwrewgh mar mynnowgh-hwi, syrra hweg
- Rag delyow sevi a wra mowesi teg.
Fatel vydh mar kwrav-vy agas gorra-hwi y'n dor,
Gans agas bejeth gwynn, ha'gas blew melyn?
- My a vynn sevel arta, syrra hweg,
- Rag delyow sevi a wra mowesi teg.
Fatel vydh mar kwrav-vy agas dri-hwi gans flogh,
Gans agas bejeth gwynn, ha'gas blew melyn?
- My a vynn y dhoen, syrra hweg,
- Rag delyow sevi a wra mowesi teg.
Piw a vynnowgh-hwi kavoes rag syrra rag'as flogh,
Gans agas bejeth gwynn, ha'gas blew melyn?
- Hwi a vydh y syrra, syrra hweg,
- Rag delyow sevi a wra mowesi teg.
Pandr'a vynnowgh-hwi kavoes rag lennow rag'as flogh
Gans agas bejeth gwynn, ha'gas blew melyn?
- Y das a vydh tregher, syrra hweg
- Rag delyow sevi a wra mowesi teg.
Translation
editWhere are you going, pretty maid,
with your white face and your yellow hair?
- I'm going to the spring, kind sir,
- for strawberry leaves make maidens fair.
I'll go with you, pretty maid,
with your white face and your yellow hair?
- If you want to, kind sir,
- for strawberry leaves make maidens fair.
What if I get you on the ground, pretty maid,
with your white face and your yellow hair?
- I'll jump up again, kind sir,
- for strawberry leaves make maidens fair.
What if I get you with child, pretty maid,
with your white face and your yellow hair?
- I will bear him, kind sir,
- for strawberry leaves make maidens fair.
Who will you get to be the father for your child, pretty maid
with your white face and your yellow hair?
- You will be his father, kind sir,
- for strawberry leaves make maidens fair.
What will you do for clothes for your child?
with your white face and your yellow hair?
- His father will be a tailor, kind sir,
- for strawberry leaves make maidens fair.
References
edit- ^ a b Paice MacLeod, Sharon (8 November 2011). Celtic Myth and Religion: A Study of Traditional Belief, with Newly Translated Prayers, Poems and Songs. Jefferson NC: McFarland & Co Inc. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-7864-6476-0.
- ^ a b Wootton, B. and Bartlett, R. (1975), Starry-Gazey Pie: Songs of Cornwall, Sentinel Records, SENS 1031 (sleeve notes).
- ^ "Delyo Syvy" – via www.youtube.com.