The Innocents Abroad


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shown the magnificent robes which the Pope wore when he crowned  
Napoleon  
I; a wagon-load of solid gold and silver utensils used in the great  
public processions and ceremonies of the church; some nails of the true  
cross, a fragment of the cross itself, a part of the crown of thorns.  
We had already seen a large piece of the true cross in a church in the  
Azores, but no nails. They showed us likewise the bloody robe which that  
archbishop of Paris wore who exposed his sacred person and braved the  
wrath of the insurgents of 1848, to mount the barricades and hold aloft  
the olive branch of peace in the hope of stopping the slaughter. His  
noble effort cost him his life. He was shot dead. They showed us a cast  
of his face taken after death, the bullet that killed him, and the two  
vertebrae in which it lodged. These people have a somewhat singular  
taste in the matter of relics. Ferguson told us that the silver cross  
which the good archbishop wore at his girdle was seized and thrown into  
the Seine, where it lay embedded in the mud for fifteen years, and then  
an angel appeared to a priest and told him where to dive for it; he did  
dive for it and got it, and now it is there on exhibition at Notre Dame,  
to be inspected by anybody who feels an interest in inanimate objects of  
miraculous intervention.  
Next we went to visit the Morgue, that horrible receptacle for the dead  
who die mysteriously and leave the manner of their taking off a dismal  
secret. We stood before a grating and looked through into a room which  
was hung all about with the clothing of dead men; coarse blouses,  
water-soaked; the delicate garments of women and children; patrician  
149  


Page
147 148 149 150 151

Quick Jump
1 187 374 560 747