Career
The name seems to be derived from the Latin expression Mater cara ("Precious Mother"), which sometimes refers to the Virgin Mary. John Masefield described her in the poem "Mother Carey (as told me by the bo"sun)" in his collection Salt Water Ballads (1902). Here she and Davy Jones are a fearsome couple responsible for storms and ship-wrecks.
In a Cicely Fox Smith poem entitled "Mother Carey", she calls old sailors to return to the sea.
The character appears as a fairy in Charles Kingsley"s The Water Babies. She lives near the North Pole and helps Tom find the Other-end-of-Nowhere.
She is shown in one of Jessie Willcox Smith"s illustrations for this book Storm petrels (thought by sailors to be the souls of dead seamen) are called Mother Carey"s Chickens.
Giant petrels are known as Mother Carey"s Geese.
In The Seaman"s Manual (1790), by Lieutenant Robert Wilson (Registered Nurse), the term Mother Carey"s children is defined as "a name given by English sailors to birds which they suppose are fore-runners of a storm."
Ernest Thompson Seton"s book Woodland Tales is described by the author as a collection of "Mother Carey Tales". In his use, Mother Carey is a Mother Nature figure, the "Angel of the Wild Things", who favors the strong and the wise but destroys the weak: "She loves you, but far less than she does your race.
lieutenant may be that you are not wise, and if it seem best, she will drop a tear and crush you into the dust.".