The Unicorn *the song playing*

Recorded by the Irish Rovers

A long time ago, when the Earth was green There was more kinds of animals than you've ever seen They'd run around free while the Earth was being born And the loveliest of all was the unicorn There was green alligators and long-necked geese Some humpty backed camels and some chimpanzees Some cats and rats and elephants, but sure as you're born The loveliest of all was the unicorn The Lord seen some sinning and it gave Him pain And He says, "Stand back, I'm going to make it rain" He says, "Hey Noah, I'll tell you what to do Build me a floating zoo, and take some of those Green alligators and long-necked geese Some humpty backed camels and some chimpanzees Some cats and rats and elephants, but sure as you're born Don't you forget My unicorns Old Noah was there to answer the call He finished up making the ark just as the rain started to fall He marched the animals two by two And he called out as they came through Hey Lord, I've got green alligators and long-necked geese Some humpty backed camels and some chimpanzees Some cats and rats and elephants, but Lord, I'm so forlorn I just can't find no unicorns" And Noah looked out through the driving rain Them unicorns were hiding, playing silly games Kicking and splashing while the rain was falling Oh, them silly unicorns There was green alligators and long-necked geese Some humpty backed camels and some chimpanzees Noah cried, "Close the door because the rain is falling And we just can't wait for no unicorns" The ark started moving, it drifted with the tide The unicorns looked up from the rocks and they cried And the waters came down and sort of floated them away That's why you never see unicorns to this very day You'll see green alligators and long-necked geese Some humpty backed camels and some chimpanzees Some cats and rats and elephants, but sure as you're born You're never gonna see no unicorns.

The Last Unicorn

When the last eagle flies Over the last crumbling mountain And the last lion roars At the last dusty fountain In the shadow of the forest Though she may be old and worn They will stare unbelieving At the Last Unicorn When the first breath of winter Throught the flowers is icing And you look to the north And a pale moon is rising And it seems like all is dying And would leave the world to mourn In the distance hear her laughter It's the Last Unicorn I'm alive... I'm alive When the last moon is cast Over the last star of morning And the future is past Without even a last desparate warning Look into the sky where through The cloudes a path is formed Look and see her how she sparkles It's the Last Unicorn I'm alive... I'm alive... I'm alive

The Days of the Unicorn

I remember when the unicorns
roved in herds through the meadow
behind the cabin, and how they would
lately pause, tilting their jewelled
horns to the falling sun as we shared
the tensions of private property
and the need to be alone.

Or as we walked along the beach
a solitary delicate beast
might follow on his soft paws
until we turned and spoke the words
to console him.

It seemed they were always near
ready to show their eyes and stare
us down, standing in their creamy
skins, pink tongues out
for our benevolence.

As if they knew that always beyond
and beyond the ladies were weaving them
into their spider looms.

I knew where they slept
and how the grass was bent
by their own wilderness
and I pitied them.

It was only yesterday, or seems
like only yesterday when we could
touch and turn and they came
perfectly real into our fictions.
But they moved on with the courtly sun
grazing peacefully beyond the story
horns lowering and lifting and
lowering.

I know this is scarcely credible now
as we cabin ourselves in cold
and the motions of panic
and our cells destroy each other
performing music and extinction
and the great dreams pass on
to the common good.

Phyllis Webb (1980)

Author's Note: "'paws': dream overlap of lion and unicorn."

Improbability

By dawn one stands yonder and gazes here, the light of a golden horn leading the path ahead. And by night, oh, how a ray of silver casts highlights and shadows over the trees of the forest, revealing the silhouette of the great horned beast! Captured, was he, only by the words of the white-gowned girl, who saw him once and told the others, �It was a magnificent creature, with an ear that never surrenders to you and a head that never lowers. With a tail held proud and a beat as sure as the light he radiates, his horn captures your fascination, and his gallop, oh, how it grasps your soul!� But when they heard this, there were none that believed, so she spoke again and said, �Have you so soon forgotten the willing suspension of disbelief? What is improbable is yet still possible!� They were still skeptical and the young girl was scolded for lying, so she told no more and no one ever again saw the great horned beast, but he is there by dawn with his golden horn, and by night his silhouette shows against the silver rays of the moon. And forever will he be there in the forest, majestically waiting for the white-gowned girl to come once more. But when she does she will not see him, for it is not probable, and probably impossible that he was ever there at all.

"The unicorn,she said,was a marvelous beast,shining with honor,wisdom and strenth.Just to see him strengthened the soul." -- from The Unicorn in the Maze by Megan Lindholm

God himself must needs be traduced, if there is no unicorn in the world. -- Edward Topsell

"The question of historicity and actuality with regard to gods and unicorns is a relatively trifling matter which may be left to antiquarians and biologists, for both the god and the unicorn had a business to perform greater than any mere existence in the flesh could explain or provide a basis for." -- Odell Shepard, The Lore of the Unicorn

Now I will believe that there are unicorns... -- William Shakespeare, The Tempest

A wise man never plays leapfrog with a unicorn. -- Tibetan proverb

Some things you have to believe to see -- Anonymous

"Their bodies are white, their heads dark red, and their eyes dark blue. They have a horn on the forehead which is about a foot and a half in length." --Ctesias; Indica, 416B.C.

"Like a lion, without fear of the howling pack; Like a gust of wind, ne'er trapped in a snare; Like a lotus blossom, ne'er sprinkled by water; Like me, like a unicorn, in solitude roam." --Hymn of Buddha

"Today it is said that the unicorn never existed. However, it is marvelously clear that when the unicorn was first described and centuries later when the tapestries were woven, everyone believed in unicorns." -Marianna Mayer, The Unicorn and the Lake


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Last Updated on May 20, 1998 by Stacey Thomas


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