Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
st guiness day...
does anyone else find it a little sad that there is so much hoo-haa about st patricks day, but barely any celebration for our own patron saint st george?
one girl I work with is 20 and she didn't even know what st georges day was! why are we celebrating someone else's national pride and not our own? I suspect if we tried to we would be called racist and told to stop celebrating as we were offending the non english...(much as in a town in north london the local council took down the union jack from their town hall after a non-english area of the community complained that it was discriminatory against those in the community who weren't british!)
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.and he only drove out a few snakes. george killed a dragon!
was talking about this the other day. me and my mates always go the pub and drink english ales on st. george's day. not a right lot different from usual but the thought is there. gonna be in LA for it this year though so it'll be tough going.
...... when the Guiness is gone St Patrick is a funny sort of lad .............
St George's Day is 23rd of April.
I don't think people really make a big thing of St Patrick's Day, like has already been mentioned it's Guinness and irish pubs that do so. It is annoying that we don't celebrate being english more.
Personally, I find Guinness disgusting, if I want soup I'll open a tin!
we the ENGLISH shoul be proud of who we are. most people realise ST. GEORGE was not a native of this fine land and accept it. (cant call us racist)
ST. PATRICK was an ENGLISH man, very few people realise that.
long live the memory of SAINT GEORGE.
BRITISH by birth.
ENGLISH by the grace of GOD.
ps, can we have another BANK HOLIDAY please ?
St Patrick was probably from Wigan, I mean it's a good a place as any. In his own biography he was vague and we assume it's somewhere on the west coast, possibly Wales but also modern day Lancashire and the Cubrian coast. As Wigan was a Roman settlement called Coccium it certainly was a community in Paddy's time. So with no evidence whatsoever, I'm staking a claim that Wigan was his birthplace.
Oh, and didn't the Anglican Church stamp out the worship of Saints Days so no wonder St George isn't celebrated as much as the Catholics celebrate St Patrick's Day across the water.