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Pilgrim

Pilgrim.jpg Pile-dwelling Village,  New GuineaThumbnailsPilgrim at St. Peters, RomePile-dwelling Village,  New GuineaThumbnailsPilgrim at St. Peters, RomePile-dwelling Village,  New GuineaThumbnailsPilgrim at St. Peters, RomePile-dwelling Village,  New GuineaThumbnailsPilgrim at St. Peters, RomePile-dwelling Village,  New GuineaThumbnailsPilgrim at St. Peters, Rome

Pilgrim, from Erasmus’s “Praise of Folly.”
The staff, or bourdon, was not of an invariable shape. On a fourteenth-century grave-stone at Haltwhistle, Northumberland, it is like a rather long walking-stick, with a natural knob at the top. In the cut from Erasmus’s “Praise of Folly” ” it is a similar walking-stick; but, usually, it was a long staff, some five, six, or seven feet long, turned in the lathe, with a knob at the top, and another about a foot lower down.