A well known weather saying that has - thankfully - never proved correct.
St Swithin's Day, if thou dost rain
For forty days it will remain.
St Swithin's Day, if thou be fair
For forty days, twill rain no more.
It was especially wrong in 1976 when there were lots of violent thunderstorms with rain over night on the 15th and then for the next 40 days there was virtually no rain, leading to the hottest summer and worst drought in living memory.
[I was working on the mobile library which was before any sort of air conditioning, so we sweltered in a 'tin box' - day after day].
St Swithin was an English monk who became Bishop of Winchester in 852 and died 10 years later. At his request he was buried in the churchyard rather than inside. On 15th July 971 his remains were moved to an appropriate resting place inside the Cathedral. This coincided with a period of heavy rain that lasted for 40 days - and that's how the prediction started.
Another old rhyme, found in one of my folklore books - written in the 18th century
Now if on St Swithin's Feast the welkin lours,
And every pent house streams with hasty showers.
Twice twenty day shall clouds their fleeces drain,
And wash the pavements with incessant rain.
('welkin' is the sky and 'lours' means glowers or threatens)

The picture comes from The Farmers Almanac website
Back soon.
PS Hooray to the BBC for Quizzy Mondays being ⅔ back - a small crumb after the weeks of tennis watching! and I promise no more mentions of tennis until next year!
I too was working on a mobile library in 1976. I was in the Schools Mobile Service and we got a lot of whiffy kids on board every time we stopped.
ReplyDeleteI did a year in the Schools Library Service in 1974 - it was my favourite job - I loved making up the project boxes - searching the shelves for books to suit the subject and going round the schools- we used to get school dinners!.
DeleteThen a mobile library moved base to be in the town I was going to live in after getting married so I changed jobs.
What about the USA Open?
ReplyDeleteIt's only on pay TV here and very expensive and wrong times too - sadly
DeleteWasn't UC brilliant last night? My old Uni won!
ReplyDeleteSuch a close game. It's so much better to watch since 2023 - Jeremy Paxman always seemed so angry!
DeleteForty days of rain would be too much but my goodness we need some. Preferably nice sunny days and bucketing rain overnight.
ReplyDeletePenny
Penny
There is some rain forecast here but possibly heavy rain in many parts of the country - hope they don't get flash flooding with the ground being so hard.
DeleteWoke up to rain this morning; garden looking so much fresher.
ReplyDeleteYes, hooray for quizzy Mondays!
Half a dozen spots here - thats all so far
DeleteThis brings back memories of my mum, she always quoted this rhyme, we had rain this morning, bet we don't get 40 days of rain, as a gardener I would not mind, the local mum's would complain as the school holidays start soon.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure the weather is going to break down for the school holidays - such a shame
DeleteWe are due three days of rain this week, and boy, do we ever need it. Yet north of us, New York State is having flooding issues!
ReplyDeleteSo while we need it, we're also groaning a bit. We are beginning to move furniture on an open truck. Timing is everything, I guess!
Crazy how it can go from drought to flood in a few days. Hope you can cover the furniture just in case
DeleteI worked in school libraries and also in public libraries for quite a while and those were my favorite jobs.
ReplyDeleteQuite a few of the saint legends sound so silly.
I suppose stories and folklore was all they had years ago
DeleteI like the thought of clouds with fleeces.
ReplyDeleteWe had a little rain this morning - the blink and miss it kind.
In 1976, I was teaching in a classroom with one entire glass wall, no blinds, and thirty hot and sticky six-year-olds.
Just the thought of a huge glass wall makes me feel hot
DeleteI love the tale about St. Swithin, Sue. How fun!!! Love, Andrea xoxo
ReplyDeleteSo many saints and so many strange tales!
DeleteOh bloody hell, if today is St Swithin's Day it doesn't bode well for Summer in our neck of the woods. We've had on and off torrential rain all day. Great for the garden, but only in small doses, definitely not needed for 40 days!!
ReplyDeleteOh No, just a few spots here so far
DeleteThis was interesting! Thank you for sharing it with us!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome!
DeleteWell, we had steady quite heavy rain overnight (hooray, shouts my garden) and I for one am happy to be driving and walking around in rain. I have a jacket - never bother with an umbrella myself. I can do without 40 days of it though.
ReplyDeleteNo Rain so still watering here this evening - dark cloud around so there might be some later
DeleteInteresting that there are two rhymes with basically the same message -- clearly this "myth" has been around a long time. Love the artwork. We're dry as a bone here, but I hope we don't have to wait 40 days before we get any moisture!
ReplyDeleteOne of the best know weather rhymes so must have been often said through the centuries
Delete