One fateful day, a local fisherman was walking along the sandy creek when he stumbled across several men and women dancing in the moonlight. He knew at once that these were not just ordinary people because he also spotted discarded seal skins nearby. They were creatures from the stories that he had heard as a boy. 

The Selkie. 

He had heard tales, and now and then, when someone would go missing, there would be talk of the Merfolk, but he had never seen them like this. Enthralled, he approached the group.

At his sudden appearance, the dancing Merfolk fled. They grabbed their seal skins and donned them, transforming almost instantly into seals and returning immediately to the sea. However, the Shetlander had a quick eye and nimble fingers. He noticed a sealskin and grabbed for it, tucking it away seamlessly into his pocket. 

With no one left on the beach, he hurried home, sure that there was more to come. The man quickly hid the skin and made sure no one saw him or his prize. 

Art by Julie Dillon

A Damsel in Distress

The next morning, he awoke to find a beautiful maiden pounding at his door. She was furious and demanded he return the stolen skin. It turns out that a Selkie needed their skin to transform, without which they were exiled from their home and people.    

The fisherman was barely listening. He was captivated by her beauty and had fallen in love. The thought of returning her sealskin and letting her leave- he could not bare it. 

Instead, he promised to take care of her on land as his wife. He may have lied and said he had lost the sealskin or never even had it in the first place. He could have been a good-looking captor. Whatever the reason, the Selkie conceded, and they were married immediately.  

They lived in relative happiness for a few years and had many children. The man was pleased with the turn his life had taken, but his Mermaid wife never fully embraced her life on land. 

Art below by Briana Corr Scott from her “The Book of Selkie”

On particularly rough days, she would wander alone to the sandy shore and signal for a great seal. They would talk at length in an unknown tongue before the great seal returned to the waves. 

More time passed until one day, the children found something peculiar while playing in the barn. The youngest boy pulled it out of the stack of corn and examined what appeared to be a sealskin. Delighted, he ran to show his mother. 

When she saw her seal skin, she wept tears of joy and hugged her son, thanking him and silently apologizing. Without a second look, she tore through the house and ran for the shore. In some versions of the story, the mother tries to take her children with her but fails. All but one turn into rocks. 

The Shetlander saw his wife and chased after her, but he was too late. By the time he reached the beach, her transformation was complete, and she was frolicking in the waves. Her companion during her long exile, the great seal, swam next to her, and together they approached the man. 

She looked upon her wretched husband and felt pity. She called out: “Farewell! and may all good attend you! I loved you very well when I resided upon earth, but I always loved my first husband better!”



Where does the Selkie originate? 

Cartoon Saloon’s “Song of the Sea” co-produced by Tomm Moore

Seal Facts


Migratory Folktales

Image from Kiviuq and the Mermiads written by Noel McDermott and Illustrated by Toma Feizo Gas


Selkie vs Merfolk 

Left is Edvard Eriksen “Little Mermaid” in Copenhagen and the right is Mikladalur’s Kópakonan on the Faroe Islands

Selkie Men

Quick Color Selkie by Zirasharia