It's Raining, It's Pouring
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{{Infobox song
| name = It's Raining, It's Pouring
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| type = Nursery rhyme
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| recorded = 1939
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{{Portal |Children's literature}}
"It's Raining, It's Pouring" is an English language nursery rhyme and children's song of American origin. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 16814.{{cite web |title=English Folk Dance and Song Society: The National Organisation for the Development of the Folk Arts |url=https://www.vwml.org/roudnumber/16814 |website=Vaughan Williams Memorial Library |accessdate=24 May 2020}}
Origins
The first two lines of this rhyme can be found in The Little Mother Goose, published in the US in 1912.Anon, [http://www.gutenberg.org/files/20511/20511-h/20511-h.htm The Little Mother Goose] (1912, Dodd, Mead & Company, 3rd edn., 1918), p. 169. The melody is the same as "A Tisket, A Tasket" and has been associated with "What Are Little Boys Made Of?",{{cite journal |last1=Hayes |first1=Bruce P. |last2=MacEachern |first2=Margaret |title=Quatrain Form in English Folk Verse |journal=Language |date=1998 |volume=74 |issue=3 |pages=480–481 |doi=10.2307/417791 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_XUKAQAAMAAJ&q=pouring|accessdate=24 May 2020 |issn=0097-8507|jstor=417791|quote=Our folk song database includes no instances of the parallel long-last construction GG4G, but we know of three of them from our childhoods. Ex: [What are little boys made of] is one (The others are 'It's Raining, It's Pouring' and 'A-Tisket, A-Tasket, A Green and Yellow Basket')}} which has a different melody.
The earliest known audio recording of the song was made in 1939 in New York by anthropologist and folklorist Herbert Halpert and is held in the Library of Congress.{{cite web |title=It's raining, it's pouring |url=https://www.loc.gov/item/afc9999005.10625/#about-this-item |website=Library of Congress|date=24 October 1939 |accessdate=16 June 2015}} Charles Ives added musical notes in 1939,{{citation needed|date=May 2020}} and a version of it was copyrighted in 1944 by Freda Selicoff.{{cite book |last1=Henderson |first1=C. W. |title=The Charles Ives Tunebook |date=2008 |publisher=Indiana University Press |page=141}}{{cite book |title=Catalog of Copyright Entries: Musical compositions |date=1944 |publisher=Library of Congress, Copyright Office. |page=1362 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yj5jAAAAIAAJ&q=390753 |language=en}}
The lyrics of the poem go as follows:
:It's raining, it's pouring,
:The old man is snoring,
:He went to bed and bumped his head,
:And couldn't get up in the morning.
Interpretation
It has been suggested that “it’s raining. It’s pouring” is a metaphor for alcohol liberally flowing. The old man gets drunk causing him to bump his head.
It has further been suggested that the verse is a "classic description" of a head injury ("bumped his head"), followed by a lucid interval and an inability to resume normal activity ("couldn't get up in the morning"). Andrew Kaye in Essential Neurosurgery suggested that, in regard to the first verse at least, the rhyme is an interpretation of an accidental death.{{cite book |last1=Kaye |first1=Andrew H. |title=Essential Neurosurgery |date=2009 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |isbn=978-1-4051-4817-7 |page=57 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=c-C1fq0tzBkC&q=raining%20pouring |language=en}}