Robin Hood could bear any wind but a thaw wind: Difference between revisions
From International Robin Hood Bibliography
m (Text replacement - "=== Notes ===" to "== Notes ==") |
m (Text replacement - "embedformat=h4" to "embedformat=h3") |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
=== Citations === | === Citations === | ||
<div class="century">{{#ask:[[Category:proverb-thaw]]| format=embedded|embedformat= | <div class="century">{{#ask:[[Category:proverb-thaw]]| format=embedded|embedformat=h3|columns=1|limit=1000|sort=Utitle}}--> | ||
== Brief mention == | == Brief mention == |
Revision as of 15:48, 12 July 2018
By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-16. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-07-12.
The exact meaning of the expression Robin Hood could bear any wind but a thaw wind, with variations such as "stand" for "bear", "anything" for "any wind", is uncertain, but I think it is testimony to the reality of the experience of wind chill.[1] Uttering this expression would thus amount to an (implicit) assertion that a windy day with temperatures above feezing point can feel colder than a calm day with temperatures below 0C°.
Collections and lists
- Dobson, R. B., ed.; Taylor, J., ed. Rymes of Robyn Hood: an Introduction to the English Outlaw (London, 1976), p. 290.
- Hermentrude. 'Lancashire Proverbs', Notes & Queries, Series 3, vol. VIII (1865), pp. 494-95, lists 25 proverbs, including "Robin Hood could bear any wind but a thaw wind".[2]
Brief mention
- Gilchrist, R. Murray. The Dukeries (London, Glasgow and Bombay, 1913), p. 24.
- Turner, J. Horsfall. The History of Brighouse, Rastrick, and Hipperholme; with Manorial Notes on Coley, Lightcliffe, Northowram, Shelf, Fixby, Clifton and Kirklees (Bingley, Yorkshire, 1893), p. 203, cites a few Robin Hood proverbs, including this 'As I shiver whilst writing these lines, I remember the force of the Brighouse saying, "Robin Hood feared nought but a thaw wind."'
Background
Notes
- ↑ See Wikipedia: Wind chill. I know from experience that winter typically feels colder in windswept, open Denmark than in sheltered but colder areas of southern Norway.
- ↑ Hermentrude cites an 1864 Lancashire dialect text, reprinted in Ormerod, Oliver; March, Henry Colley. The writings of Oliver Ormerod (Rochdale, 1901), pp. 105-238, as his source of the majority of the proverbs. I have not found the Robin Hood proverb in Ormerod.