Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 331, May, 1843 by Various
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page 34 of 353 (09%)
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represent the aristocratic classes and the liberal arts, are
added 500 labourers and workmen, who may be said to represent the people. "The seat of the brotherhood is in the place _del Duomo_. Each brother has there, marked with his own name, a box enclosing a black robe like that of the _penitents_, with openings only for the eyes and mouth, in order that his good actions may have the further merit of being performed in secret. Immediately that the news of any accident or disaster is brought to the brother who is upon guard, the bell sounds its alarm, once, twice, or thrice, according to the gravity of the case; and at the sound of the bell every brother, wherever he may be, is bound to retire at the instant, and hasten to the rendezvous. There he learns what misfortune or what suffering has claimed his pious offices; he puts on his black robe and a broad hat, takes the taper in his hand, and goes forth where the voice of misery has called him. If it is some wounded man, they bear him to the hospital; if the man is dead, to a chapel: the nobleman and the day labourer, clothed with the same robe, support together the same litter, and the link which unites these two extremes of society is some sick pauper, who, knowing neither, is praying equally for both. And when these brothers of mercy have quitted the house, the children whose father they have carried out, or the wife whose husband they have borne away, have but to look around them, and always, on some worm-eaten piece of furniture, there will be found a pious alms, deposited by an unknown hand. "The Grand-duke himself is a member of this fraternity, and I have been assured that more than once, at the sound of that |
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