Bank Holiday
We go to the seaside. We sit on the sand and eat ice-cream…. Photo by crunchcandy/flickr
Irene, who lives in Germany, is a regular listener to these podcasts. She has sent me an e-mail to suggest that I make a podcast about “bank holidays” in England and the way that we celebrate them.
Most countries have public holidays at various times of the year – that means, days when schools, offices and many businesses are closed, so that most people do not have to go to work. In England, our public holidays have the rather strange name “bank holidays”. The name comes from an Act of Parliament in 1871, which required the Bank of England to close on certain days during the year. The idea was that, if the Bank of England was closed, many other businesses would close as well, and that their employees could have a day off work. And that is in fact what has happened – the “bank holidays” have become general public holidays.
Some of the “bank holidays” are at the times of the important traditional Christian festivals at Easter and Christmas. But the other holidays are not religious, they are secular. Unlike public holidays in many other countries, they are not on a fixed date every year. Instead they are all on Mondays, so that people can take a long weekend break if they wish. Tomorrow, for example, is the May Day Bank Holiday, which is on the first Monday in May every year. We have another bank holiday, the Spring Bank Holiday, on the last Monday in May; and another bank holiday on the last Monday in August.
In Scotland and Ireland they have bank holidays on the feast days of their patron saints – St Andrew’s Day (30 November) in Scotland, and St Patrick’s Day (17 March) in Ireland. But although we poor English have a patron saint, St George, we do not get a holiday on St George’s Day on 23 April. This is not fair.
So, what do we English do on our bank holidays? We visit friends and relatives. Or perhaps we stay in bed until lunch-time. We dig our gardens and we mow our lawns. We go to football or cricket matches. We go to huge out-of-town superstores to buy curtains and things for the kitchen. We do DIY jobs around the house, like painting the bedroom or putting up a new shelf in the bathroom. And if the weather is good, we get in our cars and we go to the seaside. There we sit on the sand and eat ice-creams. At the end of the day, we get back into our cars and drive home. We get stuck in enormous traffic jams on the motorways. The children argue and fight in the back of the car. We arrive home tired but happy late in the evening. A perfect bank holiday! It’s such a pity we have to get up in the morning and go to work.
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3 July 2010
hello everybody , i am a teacher of English in a middle school.Well , although i am a teacher , i still learn a lot from this website. I find it very interesting , especially for new learners of English.I thank you a lot for this website.Nada from Algeria
15 February 2010
free learn only
12 May 2008
A suggestion to all the readers and listeners of this very good site: we could write something about the subject of the week in order to practise written english too. In this case we can say something about the holidays in our respective country and see if and what holidays we have in common. In my country for example the 25 of april is the "liberation's holiday" and the first of may is the "workers holiday". And in yours? Gian from Italy
12 May 2008
Dear Peter
Hello, How are you?
Thanks for your reply and i appologize for late reply, yes that was the point, i used to write the Rome as "Rom" !!! and that was the problem i think,
i hope i can see my comment now on the website ;)
now i try …
9 May 2008
Hi. how are you ?
I want to appreciate because of your good blogs. they are helpful to learn how to use English in society.
And a question. what do you do ? the job , I mean. where do you live? are you a English teacher ?
but anyway , GOOD LUCK and SO LONG