I love the rain. We need the rain, but lately we have been getting lots of rain. I am not going to complain because it is better to get the rain and wish we had a little less than to have everything dry and dusty and wonder why it doesn't rain! I am glad for the rain. Some garden produce items are not doing well, like tomatoes because we have not had enough sunshine and warm weather to make them grow. I am missing lots of time working on my cellar because of rain, but that is okay, as I am sure I will have enough time to finish my digging anyway. I am having a free day, because it is raining too much to carry dirt out of the cellar, and I need to do that before I can make more progress. If nothing else at the end I will just put up a light and work day and night and figure I had my rest times!
Rain Rain Go Away
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For the short story by Isaac Asimov, see Rain, Rain, Go Away (short story).
""Rain Rain Go Away""
Roud #19096
William Wallace Denslow's illustrations for a variant of Rain Rain Go Away, from a 1901 edition of Mother Goose
Written by Traditional
Published 17th C or earlier
Written United Kingdom
Language English
Form Nursery rhyme
"Rain Rain Go Away" is a popular English language nursery rhyme. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 19096.
Contents
[hide]
• 1 Lyrics
• 2 Origins
• 3 In popular culture
• 4 Notes
There are many versions and variations of this rhyming couplet. The most common modern version of is:
Rain rain go away,
Come again another day.[1]
[edit] Origins
Similar rhymes can be found in many societies, including ancient Greece. The modern English language rhyme can be dated to at least to the seventeenth century when James Howell in his collection of proverbs noted:
Raine raine goe to Spain: faire weather come againe.[1]
A version very similar to the modern version was noted by John Aubrey in 1687 as used by "little children" to "charme away the Raine...":
Rain raine goe away,
Come again a Saturday.[1]
A wide variety of alternative have been recorded including: "Midsummer day", "washing day", "Christmas Day" and "Martha's wedding day".[1]
In the mid-nineteenth century James Orchard Halliwell collected and published the version:
Rain, rain, go away
Come again another day
Little Arthur wants to play.[2]
In a book from the late 19th century, the lyrics are as follows:
Rain, Rain,
Go away;
Come again,
April day;
Little Johnny wants to play.[3]