User:Pjoef/Quotes/St George's Day



ve
pjoef
Commons
WikiNews
Wiktionary
WikiQuote
WikiBooks
WikiSource
WikiSpecies
Wikiversity
MetaWiki
ve
Unified login: pjoef is the unique login of this user for all public Wikimedia projects.
Home Page About me ~ lol Current favourites subjects Do You Like Scratchin'? Motto of the day, great quotations, and other stuff Stuff nice people gave to me Running Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday. What have I done? I talk to the wind. The Wind does not hear
User About Favourites Sandbox Quotes Awards Contributions Talk
User:Pjoef/Quotes/St George's Day – Monday, 22 April 2024
User page: This is a Wikipedia user page, not an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user to whom this page belongs may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia itself. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Pjoef/Quotes/St_George%27s_Day.

St George's Day edit

Happy St. George's Day!

¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤


 
Raphael (1483–1520), St. George and the Dragon (1504-1506)
Oil on wood, 28,5 × 21,5 cm, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., United States.

¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤

Georgi martir inclite
te decet laus et gloria.
Predotatum milicia
per quem puella regia
existens in tristicia,
Coram dracone pessimo
te rogans corde intimo
salvata est et animo
se reddidit altissimo.
Cum multis fidelibus
fac ergo sic ut civibus
tu nos reddas celestibus
nostris ablutis sordibus.
Ut simul cum leticia
tecum simus in gloria
nostraque reddant labia
laudes Christo cum gracia. Amen.
Ora pro nobis beate Georgi martyr,
ut hostes visibiles et.


¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤


Mar Jiryis (Saint George) and the Dragon
Palestine

There was once a great city that depended for its water supply upon a fountain without the walls. A great dragon, possessed and moved by Satan himself, took possession of the fountain and refused to allow water to be taken unless, whenever people came to the spring, a youth or maiden was given to him to devour. The people tried again and again to destroy the monster; but though the flower of the city cheerfully went forth against it, its breath was so pestilential that they used to drop down dead before they came within bow-shot.

The terrorized inhabitants were thus obliged to sacrifice their offspring, or die of thirst; till at last all the youth of the place had perished except the king's daughter. So great was the distress of their subjects for want of water that her heart-broken parents could no longer withhold her, and amid the tears of the populace she went out towards the spring, where the dragon lay awaiting her. But just as the noisome monster was going to leap on her, Mar Jiryis appeared, in golden panoply, upon a fine white steed, and spear in hand. Riding full tilt at the dragon, he struck it fair between the eyes and laid it dead. The king, out of gratitude for this unlooked-for succor, gave Mar Jiryis his daughter and half of his kingdom.

¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤


¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤ ~~•~~•~~•~~ ¤