|thumb|right "Petrel" is thought to be a diminutive form of "Peter", a reference to
Saint Peter, given to these birds because they sometimes appear to walk across the water's surface. The more specific "storm petrel" or "stormy petrel" is a reference to their habit of hiding in the lee of ships during storms. Early sailors named these birds "
Mother Carey's chickens" because they were thought to warn of oncoming storms; this name is based on a corrupted form of
Mater Cara, a name for the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
Breton folklore holds that storm petrels are the spirits of sea-captains who mistreated their crew, doomed to spend eternity flying over the sea, and they are also held to be the souls of drowned sailors.
A sailing superstition holds that the appearance of a storm petrel foretells bad weather. Sinister names from Britain and France include waterwitch, satanite, satanique, and
oiseau du diable.
Symbol of revolution The association of the storm petrel with turbulent weather has led to its use as a metaphor for revolutionary views, a
Presbyterian minister in the early Carolinas, an Afghan governor, or an
Arkansas politician. presumably due to his authorship of the famous 1901 poem "
Song of the Stormy Petrel". In "Song of the Stormy Petrel", Gorki turned to the imagery of subantarctic avifauna to describe Russian society's attitudes to
the coming revolution. The storm petrel was depicted as unafraid of the coming storm –the revolution. This poem was called "the battle anthem of the revolution", and earned Gorky himself the title of the "Storm Petrel of the Revolution". While this English translation of the bird's name may not be a very ornithologically accurate translation of the Russian
burevestnik (буревестник), it is poetically appropriate, as
burevestnik literally means "the announcer of the storm". To honour Gorky and his work, the name
Burevestnik was bestowed on a variety of institutions, locations, and products in the
USSR. or for their publications. "Stormy Petrel" was the title of a
German anarchist paper of the late 19th century; it was also the name of a Russian exile
anarchist communist group operating in Switzerland in the early 20th century.
The Stormy Petrel (
Burevestnik) was the title of the magazine of the
Anarchist Communist Federation in Russia around the time of the
1905 revolution, and is still an imprint of the London group of the
Anarchist Federation of Britain and Ireland. Writing in 1936,
Emma Goldman referred to
Buenaventura Durruti as "this stormy petrel of the anarchist and revolutionary movement". ==References==