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Bird Symbolism & Amalfi
In a state, then, of clear and present overstun, I
was left to wonder about two mundane items that caught
my attention. One was this reference to the
above-mentioned remains: The bones of St. Andrew, enclosed in three beautifully decorated cases, emanate an extraordinary substance: Manna. I don't know quite what to make of that. Manna is one of the many things I know very little about, but I had always thought it referred to the substance mentioned in the 16th chapter of Exodus, the food miraculously supplied to the Children of Israel during their 40 years of wandering in the wilderness: …and it was like coriander seed, white; and the taste of it was like wafers made with honey... My OED now tells me, however, that "manna" is
also A sweet pale yellow or whitish concrete juice obtained from incisions in the bark of the Manna-ash, Fraxinus Ornus, chiefly in Calabria and Sicily; used in medicine as a gentle laxative. Also, a similar exudation obtained from other plants.I am not sure what all that means. I am irreverently—but briefly—reminded of Mark Twain's comment that Christ had 12 disciples and that 13 of them are buried in Germany. I suppose it is equally irreverent to suppose that the bones of a dead person—even a saint—might provide food for those so inclined. I shall have to let that go for a while. The item that really caught my attention was the
statue of a bird (photo, above), standing upright,
wings outspread, high enough (about five feet) to
partially occlude the lectern it was placed in front
of. The tour-guide who had known every little thing
about every handle and hinge on the bronze doors of
the cathedral tried to drag us right by the bird with
no comment. I asked. She didn't know. Fine, it
happens. No hard feelings, but I had to know. It was
clearly out of place, gray and drab—but totally
surrounded by splendor. The first problem was to
figure out what kind of bird it was. The wings were no
help. They looked angelic and out-of-place on any
avian species I was familiar with—except for that race
of Hawk Men in the old Flash Gordon serials
from the 1930s. The eagle,
symbol of
And so on. It is a very long and complicated list to thresh out for allegorists. The statue in the Amalfi cathedral really didn't look like a dove, which had been my first intuition. An eagle? Maybe. My wife was of the opinion that it looked like some kind of a "stretched chicken". "Hah. There are no chickens in Christian symbolism,"
I said profoundly. A cock is Mr. Chicken. Wifely hermeneutics can be enlightening at times. Assuming this not to be one of those times, I put Mr. Chicken on the back-burner with the Hawk Men. I called the Amalfi archdiocese and spoke to a knowledgeable young man. Indeed, the statue is of an eagle and represents St. John the Evangelist. Every evangelist is represented by an animal. The eagle represents St. John because in his Gospel, St. John sees with the unflinching eye of an eagle the highest truths in the divinity of Christ, the Redeemer. The statue seemed—was—out of place because it had, in fact, been moved to be in front of a lectern in the main part of the church in keeping with this spirit of the Evangelist, the preacher. Originally, the statue had been in the baptistery. The eagle, it seems, is a symbol of baptism, as well. It was a belief among the ancients that the eagle could renew its youth by plunging three times into pure water. Indeed, Terence Hanbury White's translation of a 12th-century bestiary tells us: ...when the eagle grows old and his wings become heavy and his eyes become darkened with a mist, then he goes in search of a fountain...and he dips himself three times in it and he is renewed with a great vigour of plumage and slendour of vision...Do the same thing, O Man, you who are clothed in the old garment and have the eyes of your heart growing foggy. Seek for the spiritual fountain of the Lord...And in the 103rd Psalm, David says: ...who satisfieth thy mouth with good things back to index |