Irish abbess; a patron saint of Ireland (453-523)
1SHE was daughter of Ulpho, prince of Nericia, in Sweden, and of St. Bridget.
2The Madonna and Child, with St. Bridget and St. Hulfus, has been called Giorgionesque.
3They showed that he entered St. Bridget's Bay from the direction of Port Marston.
4Vadstene, at least, is not the repository of St. Bridget and her daughter's dust.
5The rich cloister of St. Bridget's, whence kings made pilgrimages, is now Sweden's mad-house.
6It revolted against the suggested congruity of Carlotta and the Little Sisters of St. Bridget.
7The fort of St. Bridget that covered the place was taken, and the town bombarded.
8Great was the cloister's power, as St. Bridget saw it in the prospect of death.
9The working people reckon their good times from one St. Bridget's kermis to the next.
10She was very cruel, while St. Bridget was as kind as she dare to be.
11We enter St. Bridget's cell-itstill stands unchanged.
12During this illness I was placed under the care of an Abbess whom they called St. Bridget.
13Did not St. Bridget tell you this?
14You know the St. Bridget.
15As I said before, I wish to visit St. Bridget's Well, but Jane absolutely refuses to take me there.
16But the defunct had before been subjected to the double scrutiny of Father Fothergill and the Clerk of St. Bridget's.
Translations for St. Bridget