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#st patrick
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This Saint Patrick's Day, don't forget the reason for the season. Celebrate like St. Patrick would have wanted:
Speak Welsh.
Turn your enemies into foxes
Call out your local politicians
Set a bonfire, piss off the cops
Curse your enemies' fields to become barren marshes, unfit for farmland.
Cause an earthquake
Write all your letters in Latin
Despite this, claim that your Latin is bad.
Become a key part of Uí Néill propaganda.
Yeet your enemies into the sky so that they freeze to death.
Adopt a child who refuses to leave you alone.
Bargain with an angel to be allowed to judge the souls of the Irish on Judgement Day
Remind your local surviving members of the Fianna that all their friends are dead and in Hell.
Have two oxen decide your burial place
Develop a long and complex relationship with St. Brigit in the folk tradition, despite neither of you being contemporaries.
Refuse to suck the nipples of the pirates who you are trying to convince to take you back to Britain.
Disguise yourself as a deer
Fight against manmade climate change
Be accused by your former friend of unspecified charges that might or might not have involved gay sex and write a long self-justifying letter about your tragic backstory.
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5-inch-and-more · 1 month
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Green
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abybweisse · 1 month
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Anyone else think it's weird that Snake is born on March 15th (Ides of March), while that's when we get our first spoilers for ch210, and now we have the rest of the ch210 spoilers on St. Patrick's Day? The saint credited with getting rid of all the snakes in Ireland....
March 17 is also the day our earl officially gains the title of earl.
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littleflowerfaith · 1 month
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By Eva McKee
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psychologeek · 1 month
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Anyone else feels like it's kinda ironic that St. Patrick's day is a major holiday in Ireland? No? Just me?
IDK. I feel like it's kinda weird to celebrate someone who wasn't even indigenous to the land, who's known for chasing away the og religion of the area.
Almost like celebrating "Columbus Day" in America.
Oh, wait....
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reniadeb · 1 year
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🐍@reniadeb🐍
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acocktailmoment · 1 month
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Tipperary !
Ingredients:
1 1/2 ounces whiskey
3/4 ounces green chartreuse
3/4 ounces sweet vermouth
2 dashes bitters
1 orange twist (for garnish)
Directions:
Add Irish whiskey, green Chartreuse, sweet vermouth, and bitters into a mixing glass with ice and stir until well-chilled, about 25 rotations.
Strain into a chilled coupe.
Express the oils from the orange twist over the glass and serve.
Courtesy: Sean Flynn
This article was not sponsored or supported by a third-party. A Cocktail Moment is not affiliated with any individuals or companies depicted here.
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st. patrick's day
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Saint Patrick's Day! Green beer, green clothes, parades and corned beef and cabbage for all! In America, we have a lot of traditions associated with St. Pat's Day and a pleasure in celebrating them whether we're Irish or not - heck, even whether we understand them or not.
So let's take a look at some of the ways we celebrate and what we get wrong - and right.
To start with the man himself, Saint Patrick wasn't Irish. Patrick grew up on the Britain side of things. This doesn't make him British however. At the time, the Isle of Britain was run, mostly, by the Romans and letters from Patrick that have survived see him not only writing them in Latin but signing them as Patricius. Whether he was Roman by birth is still a mystery to this day but his family is believed to have been part of the Roman aristocracy. At sixteen, he was kidnapped and ended up in slavery as a shepherd in Ireland before eventually escaping back to Britain. After receiving training however, he returned to Ireland as a missionary and the rest is - well, not history but certainly lore.
There's some speculation, in fact, that the Saint Patrick of myth was actually two men. Saint Patrick the escaped slave and a bishop sent by Pope Celestine in 431 named Palladius to support the 'Irish believing in Christ' that already lived there.
Did he, or they, at least drive out the snakes? Legend says that St. Patrick drove all the snakes out of Ireland and the island has been slither free since. The truth is - according to fossil records, Ireland never had any snakes to drive out. Ireland was under an ice sheet up until the last glacial period and after that it was safely surrounded by water. To save a little bit of the story, some historians believe 'driving out the snakes' was more of a metaphor for driving out the pagan religions of that time instead.
But we totally wear green to avoid getting pinched! Right? Actually - yes. Though the pinching is supposed to come from mischievous leprechauns, not your over-enthusiastic siblings. Apparently, leprechauns can't see you if you're wearing green and therefore, they can't pinch what they can't see. Given our decorations featuring the little people dressed all in green, you'd think that would make it hard for them to find each other but - not really. You see, traditionally - leprechauns wore red.
The pot of gold, sometimes at the end of the rainbow though - that's real(ish).
So is the leprechauns' strange blind spot with green why everything's green on St. Pat's Day? Not really. Green is associated with Ireland, the Emerald Isle, these days but for most of its history, Ireland, and St. Patrick's, color - was blue. Green recently came into prominence during Ireland's struggle with England. Green came to be associated with the Irish side of things and wearing green was a way to show which side of that you were on. The green beer/food though? That's entirely an American thing.
Speaking of green beer, the drinking is an American thing as well. Or, at least, the 'this is a traditional part of the holiday'. In Ireland, Saint Patrick's Day has long been a Catholic religious holiday - and it also happens to fall in the middle of Lent. Originally, the day had a lot more to do with going to church than to the local pub. Which isn't to say no one in Ireland celebrates the holiday with a drink. 'Drowning the shamrock' involved pouring whiskey over a shamrock in the bottom of a glass. The whiskey is then drunk and the soaked plant is thrown over your left shoulder to complete the tradition - and get you some extra luck.
Shamrocks being considered lucky is a part of the holiday. Called 'seamroy' by the ancient Celts, the shamrock was considered a sacred plant. St. Patrick was also supposed to have used the three leaves of the plant to explain the Trinity during his sermons. Like the clover, finding a four leaf shamrock is good luck and five leaves promises a future of vast wealth!
So, yes, a lot of our St. Pat's Day traditions aren't exactly... traditional. Don't discount them or their importance however. Many of the ways we celebrate St. Patrick's Day today are the direct results of Irish immigrants to America. The parades, the corned beef and cabbage, the celebration of Irish traditions - those were all created in the mid to late 1800s by Irish Americans that wanted to celebrate their heritage. So don't feel bad for indulging in a day of parties and eating your favorite food.
Just remember to cut a cross in your soda buns to 'let the devil out' before putting them in the oven to bake for the holiday.
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vegan-nom-noms · 1 month
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Happy St Patricks Day!
Boozy Shamrock Shake (Vegan Friendly Options)
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Looking into the Pozzo di San Patrizio or Well of St Patrick, Orvieto
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angeltreasure · 1 year
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stairnaheireann · 1 month
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#OTD in Irish History | 17 March:
In the Liturgical calendar, today is the feast day of St Patrick, Ireland’s patron saint. It is a public holiday in Ireland, Montserrat and the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador and widely celebrated across the world. 1762 – St Patrick’s Day is celebrated in New York City for the first time at the Crown and Thistle Tavern. 1776 – General George Washington used the password ‘St…
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ami-ven · 1 month
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Happy St. Patrick’s Day!
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robotshowtunes · 1 month
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Lá Fhéile Pádraig Sona Duit ☘️ 🥃 🍺
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traditionbeckons · 1 year
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St Patrick
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