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Pilgrim

Pilgrim.jpg Pilgrim in Hair Shirt and CloakThumbnailsPhilippe le Bold, son of Saint Louis, after his tombstonePilgrim in Hair Shirt and CloakThumbnailsPhilippe le Bold, son of Saint Louis, after his tombstonePilgrim in Hair Shirt and CloakThumbnailsPhilippe le Bold, son of Saint Louis, after his tombstonePilgrim in Hair Shirt and CloakThumbnailsPhilippe le Bold, son of Saint Louis, after his tombstonePilgrim in Hair Shirt and CloakThumbnailsPhilippe le Bold, son of Saint Louis, after his tombstone

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.