<Tr> <Th_colspan="2"> "She Moved Through the Fair" </Th> </Tr> <Tr> <Th_colspan="2"> Song </Th> </Tr> <P> "She Moved Through the Fair" (or "She Moves Through the Fair") is a traditional Irish folk song, which exists in a number of versions and has been recorded many times . The narrator sees his lover move away from him through the fair, after telling him that since her family will approve, "it will not be long, love,' til our wedding day". She returns as a ghost at night, and repeats the words "it will not be long, love,' til our wedding day", intimating her own tragic death (possibly at the hands of her disapproving family), as well as the couple's potential reunion in the afterlife . </P> <P> The melody is in Mixolydian mode . John Loesberg speculates: "From its strange, almost Eastern sounding melody, it appears to be an air of some antiquity," but he does not define its age any more precisely . It has been found both in Ireland and in Scotland, but scraps of the song were first collected in County Donegal by the Longford poet Padraic Colum and the musicologist Herbert Hughes . </P>

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