
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


If there's a subject in which England has every right to claim knowledge through experience, it is the subject of rain. Poets, politicians, or labourers, we've lived a literally and metaphorically sheltered life if we haven't felt the chill of rain on our face. In her Rainsong Essay Dr Tess Somervell pulls together the many ways in which rain has been gathered and responded to in her native land, from the bedraggled and almost inevitably soon to be betrothed costume-drama heroine, to the high romance of the romantic poets and the ancient wisdom of an unknown medieval bard. While smell and taste and sound and sight might all play a part in our collective response to rain, we also feel it, not just on our skin but in our bones.
By BBC Radio 34.2
8282 ratings
If there's a subject in which England has every right to claim knowledge through experience, it is the subject of rain. Poets, politicians, or labourers, we've lived a literally and metaphorically sheltered life if we haven't felt the chill of rain on our face. In her Rainsong Essay Dr Tess Somervell pulls together the many ways in which rain has been gathered and responded to in her native land, from the bedraggled and almost inevitably soon to be betrothed costume-drama heroine, to the high romance of the romantic poets and the ancient wisdom of an unknown medieval bard. While smell and taste and sound and sight might all play a part in our collective response to rain, we also feel it, not just on our skin but in our bones.

7,594 Listeners

157 Listeners

1,049 Listeners

5,454 Listeners

1,798 Listeners

305 Listeners

1,751 Listeners

1,042 Listeners

2,093 Listeners

479 Listeners

579 Listeners

71 Listeners

410 Listeners

298 Listeners

821 Listeners

847 Listeners

134 Listeners

65 Listeners

243 Listeners

54 Listeners

45 Listeners

183 Listeners

4,163 Listeners

3,186 Listeners