Page 1 of 1

St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 7:54 am
by Derek Hazell
It's St. George's Day this Thursday, and it seems to be becoming a bigger thing again lately. But, do you approve of these days to celebrate our country, or are you apathetic towards such things?

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 8:17 am
by Phil Reynolds
I get the impression that many English people are only bothered to "celebrate" St George's Day because they see other people having fun on their national days and want a piece of the action. Sadly, being motivated purely by petty jealousy means that, for such people, marking the day becomes less about simply having fun and more likely to involve drunkenly aggressive displays of racism masquerading as "national pride".

April 23rd is significant to me for a number of reasons: it was my late father's birthday, it's Shakespeare's birthday (and the day he died) and it's also the anniversary of the death of my famous ancestor. St George's day comes pretty low down on the list, but I'm not sure it would matter to me any more if I were English. On St David's Day I occasionally bring daffodils into the house and might buy a packet of Welsh Cakes (because they're gorgeous, although you can't buy ones that taste anything like those my mum used to make on the griddle of the range in our kitchen), but that's as far as it goes. In my view, people who are truly patriotic wear it lightly.

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 8:28 am
by Derek Hazell
Phil Reynolds wrote:I get the impression . . .
An excellent post with a lot to think about.

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 9:53 am
by Kieran Child
"It's St George's day, the day when everyone in Britain gets together and says 'is it? I thought it was in October...'"

I don't celebrate it ;) Only learnt it was on April 23rd after reading Phil's post.

Actually, wasn't that the date when the Stratfordian Shakespeare was born and died? If so, that's a much cooler reason to remember the date.

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 10:35 am
by David Roe
They don't know for sure if he was born on that day. He was christened on about the 25th or 26th, I think, but there were no birth certificates in those days.

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 10:59 am
by Phil Reynolds
Kieran Child wrote:I don't celebrate it ;) Only learnt it was on April 23rd after reading Phil's post.

Actually, wasn't that the date when the Stratfordian Shakespeare was born and died?
Er, didn't read much of my post, did you? :(

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 12:32 pm
by Ben Hunter
You forgot to include "no, it's rubbish".

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 12:45 pm
by Michael Wallace
Ben Hunter wrote:You forgot to include "no, it's rubbish".
Also "No - why should I care?".

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 2:17 pm
by Ian Volante
Michael Wallace wrote:
Ben Hunter wrote:You forgot to include "no, it's rubbish".
Also "No - why should I care?".
Also, no, it's as insignificant to me as any other saint's day, except possibly St Nicholas, but that's cos it's my birthday and he bwings me pwesents later.

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 5:24 pm
by Eoin Monaghan
Image :D

I get off school for St.Patrick's.
We have many fun things to do in our school.

And it's near Easter.(sometimes)

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 8:12 pm
by Kai Laddiman
Eoin Monaghan wrote:I get off school for St.Patrick's.
We have many fun things to do in our school.

And it's near Easter.(sometimes)
Yeh, in some countries the patron saints actually like the countries and give them bonuses, instead of being multiple countries' saint and making us go to school (Irish luck :x ).

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2009 8:35 pm
by Howard Somerset
None of the options are appropriate for me, either.

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2009 8:00 am
by Derek Hazell
Wow, how many options do you all want? It could have ended up with so many options it would take too long to read and nobody would have voted. I was already worried that 7 might be a bit excessive.

After more than a decade on the Internet, I still can't create a decent poll . . . :cry:

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2009 8:17 am
by Howard Somerset
Derek Hazell wrote:Wow, how many options do you all want? It could have ended up with so many options it would take too long to read and nobody would have voted. I was already worried that 7 might be a bit excessive.

After more than a decade on the Internet, I still can't create a decent poll . . . :cry:
The options were all too detailed. In my case none fitted. I don't think I've ever celebrated St George's Day, so options 1-4 are eliminated. I don't regard any of the other national days as important, so 5 is discounted. I'm English, and I don't think celebrating St George's Day is at all racist, so that cuts out the other two options. A simple yes or no, and I'd certainly have been able to vote.

However, don't let this put you off. Very often the discussion that ensues from a poll is more interesting that the poll result.

I look forward to more. :)

Re: St. George's Day

Posted: Wed Apr 22, 2009 11:39 am
by George Jenkins
Howard Somerset wrote:
Derek Hazell wrote:Wow, how many options do you all want? It could have ended up with so many options it would take too long to read and nobody would have voted. I was already worried that 7 might be a bit excessive.

After more than a decade on the Internet, I still can't create a decent poll . . . :cry:
The options were all too detailed. In my case none fitted. I don't think I've ever celebrated St George's Day, so options 1-4 are eliminated. I don't regard any of the other national days as important, so 5 is discounted. I'm English, and I don't think celebrating St George's Day is at all racist, so that cuts out the other two options. A simple yes or no, and I'd certainly have been able to vote.

However, don't let this put you off. Very often the discussion that ensues from a poll is more interesting that the poll result.

I look forward to more. :)
What did St George do for us anyway, apart from killing a mythological dragon. I'm a Saint, but nobody bothers about me.