Miorița
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Miorița (Template:Lang-en) is an old Romanian pastoral ballad and is considered to be one of the most important pieces of Romanian folklore.[citation needed] It has several versions with quite different content. One of these was selected by Vasile Alecsandri to form the textbook reference.
Content
The setting is a simple one: three shepherds (a Moldavian, a Transylvanian and a Vrâncean) meet while looking after their flocks. An apparently enchanted ewe belonging to the Moldavian tells its master that the other two are plotting to murder him and steal his goods.
The shepherd replies that, were this to happen, the ewe is to ask his killers to bury his body by the sheep's pen. She is to then tell the rest of his sheep that he had married a princess during a ceremony attended by the elements of nature, and marked by the falling of a star. However, there is no rite of passage metaphor with heavenly manifestations in the version of the story the ewe is to tell the shepherd's mother: she is to hear only of her son having married a princess.
This poem was quoted extensively by Patrick Leigh Fermor in his account[1] of the second part of a journey on foot from Holland to Constantinople in 1933-34. He includes a partial translation which he refers to as "ramshackle but pretty accurate". This was actually made later during an extended stay prior to September 1939 in eastern Romania.
Legacy
The Miorița is often referred to in the novel 'My swordhand is singing' by Marcus Sedgwick.[2]
The Miorița plays a fundamental role in the novel 'The Forbidden Forest' by Mircea Eliade.
Trivia
- Miorița was the name of the state-owned milk company during the Nicolae Ceaușescu régime.
References
- ^ Fermor, Patrick Leigh (1986). Between the Woods and the Water. London: John Murray. pp. 204–207. ISBN 0-7195-4264-2.
- ^ My Swordhand is Singing. London: Orion. 2006. ISBN 978 1 84255 558 3.