
“In the afternoon, all third-year festival of Lviv was echoed by joyful noises and sounds of orchestras of various entertainments and festivals. Until late evening, the lions played where, who wanted and could- in the premises of various associations and unions, school gymnasiums, as well as outdoors, parks and gardens of suburban pubs.
On my advanced Łychaków on all third-year vacation various sports, amusement and spectacular events were held on the local, large in the Łychaków park located the field of Sokola – Matrix. There were athletic competitions and football matches, gymnasium shows and hippical shows, and various shows were held... I liked them the most and most I remembered the “living chess” “living chess” afternoon there,” says Witold Szolginia, who, as a young boy, was “soaked in joy and joy at home” and watched the events in the city that were colored with white and red national flags... "It was a chess game on a huge, white red chess board, which was designated in a "some" way on the green turf of the field. After its 64 fields, on the instructions given by megaphones of both quarterbacks, large surviving chess figures-people disguised as both kings, queens, 4 bays, 4 towers and 16 pawns moved smoothly. The 4 horses were besides real, surviving mounts, rode by riders; by the field of Falcon- The mothers were “rajtszula”, meaning a riding stable... The pawns were, of course, young boys dressed as royal pazis, towers – a appropriate plan of a mock-up made of dictation or cardboard, which had to be moved by the strong men hidden in them, and the laufers – older boys dressed as royal courtiers.” (Tamten Lviv – city life).
The festival was besides celebrated in Polish villages. After church ceremonies, academies and marches, dance games were organized for old and young to late night hours.
And until the PRL there was no request for chocolate eagles [referring to pseudocircumventions initiated by B. Komorowski in 2013. - invitation you to celebrate a joyful and festive May holiday.
It was not essential to compose peculiar songs, it was adequate for the Poles for centuries, as well as for the English until present there is no request for a fresh song, it is adequate for the celebrated song, Land of Hope and Glory, to sing the national anthem and show its patriotism all year, during the Last Night of the Proms concert.
Last Night of the Proms 2012 - Land of Hope and Glory http://www.youtube.com/embed/9tLL1Gk4gw
Among the flags that the multi-thousand crowd is waving in 2012 are Polish flags. The hope is that Poles who, following bread and normality, have settled in England will return and remember the behaviour of English people will cultivate Polish traditions destroyed by communists.
And as far as chocolate is concerned, they utilized it as an encouragement (also a sausage) to the ruler of PRL during the first-class feces.
Oh, my God.










