I agree with the commenter of 31 October 2010 that the song is fantastic but it can only be appreciated through listening to it rather than reading the lyrics alone. "Veedon Fleece" is such a chilled out album and this song one of its many highlights. Van apparently said that, "aside from 'flashes of Ireland'—the song had 'other flashes on other kinds of people. I was also reading a couple of books at the time...[there's] a bit of Gestalt theory in it, too." In the lyrics are Morrison's first referral to William Blake, and the Eternals from Blake's The Book of Urizen. The Sisters of Mercy, also mentioned in the song, is a religious organisation of women founded in Dublin, Ireland. The song seems to begin as a love song celebrating a young girl's childhood and then goes into a journey along the west coast of Ireland and then suddenly goes into a mythological search for an object he calls the "Veedon Fleece".
I agree with the commenter of 31 October 2010 that the song is fantastic but it can only be appreciated through listening to it rather than reading the lyrics alone. "Veedon Fleece" is such a chilled out album and this song one of its many highlights. Van apparently said that, "aside from 'flashes of Ireland'—the song had 'other flashes on other kinds of people. I was also reading a couple of books at the time...[there's] a bit of Gestalt theory in it, too." In the lyrics are Morrison's first referral to William Blake, and the Eternals from Blake's The Book of Urizen. The Sisters of Mercy, also mentioned in the song, is a religious organisation of women founded in Dublin, Ireland. The song seems to begin as a love song celebrating a young girl's childhood and then goes into a journey along the west coast of Ireland and then suddenly goes into a mythological search for an object he calls the "Veedon Fleece".