~* FACT OR FICTION*~
Patrick is most known the world over for having driven the snakes from
Ireland. Different tales tell of his standing upon a hill, using a wooden
staff to drive the serpents into the sea, banishing them forever from the
shores of Ireland. One legend says that one old serpent resisted, but the
saint overcame it by cunning. He is said to have made a box and invited the
reptile to enter. The snake insisted the box was too small and the discussion
became very heated. Finally the snake entered the box to prove he was right,
whereupon St Patrick slammed the lid and cast the box into the sea. While
it is true there are no snakes in Ireland, chances are that there never have
been since the time the island was seperated from the rest of the continent
at the end of the ice age. As in many old pagan religions serpent symbols
were common, and possibly even worshipped. Driving the snakes from Ireland
was probably symbolic of putting an end to that pagan practice. While not
the first to bring Christianity to Ireland, it was Patrick who encountered
the Druids at Tara and abolished their pagan rights. He converted the warrior
chiefs and princes, baptizing them and thousands of their subjects in the
Holy Wells which still bear that name. According to tradition St. Patrick
died in A.D. 493 and was buried in the same grave as St. Bridget and St.
Columba, at Downpatrick, County Down. The jawbone of St. Patrick was preserved
in a silver shrine and was often requested in times of childbirth, epileptic
fits and as a preservative against the evil eye. Another legend says St.
Patrick ended his days at Glastonbury and was buried there. The Chapel of
St. Patrick still exists as part of Galstonbury Abbey. There is evidence
of an Irish pilgrimage to his tomb during the reign of the Saxon King Ine
in A.D. 688, when a group of pilgrims headed by St. Indractus were
murdered.
The great anxiety displayed in the middle ages to possess the bodies,
or at least the relics of saints, accounts for the many discrepant traditions
as to the burial places of St. Patrick and others. And St. Patrick and the
shamrock.
~*THE SHAMROCK LEGEND*~
The Shamrock, at one time called the "Seamroy", symbolises the cross and
blessed trinity. Before the Christian era it was a sacred plant of the Druids
of Ireland because its leaves formed a triad. The well known legend of the
Shamrock connects it definitely to St. Patrick and his teaching. Preaching
in the open air on the doctrine of the trinity, he is said to have illustrated
the existence of the Three in One by plucking a shamrock from the grass growing
at his feet and showing it to his congregation. The legend of the shamrock
is also connected with that of the banishment of the serpent tribe from Ireland
by a tradition that snakes are never seen on trefoil and that it is a remedy
against the stings of snakes and scorpions. The trefoil in Arabia is called
shamrakh and was sacred in Iran as an emblem of the Persian triads. The trefoil,
as noted above, being a sacred plant among the Druids, and three being a
mystical number in the Celtic religion as well as all others, it is probable
that St. Patrick must have been aware of the significance of his illustration.
~* A SONG TO MAKE YOU SMILE*~
~*WHEN IRISH EYES ARE SMILING*~
When Irish eyes are smiling
Sure it's like a morning spring.
In the lilt of Irish laughter,
You can hear the angels sing.
When Irish hearts are happy,
All the world seems bright and gay.
And when Irish eyes are smiling,
Sure, they steal your heart away.
There's a tear in your eye, and I'm wondering why,
For it never should be there at all.
With such power in your smile, sure a stone you'd beguile,
So there's never a teardrop should fall.
When your sweet lilting laughter's like some fairy song,
And your eyes twinkle bright as can be,
You should laugh all the while and all other times smile,
And now smile a smile for me.
Chorus:
When Irish eyes are smiling
Sure it's like a morning spring.
In the lilt of Irish laughter,
You can hear the angels sing.
When Irish hearts are happy,
All the world seems bright and gay.
And when Irish eyes are smiling,
Sure, they steal your heart away.
~*St. Patrick's Day Calling Cards*~