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The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ by Anne Catherine Emmerich
CHAPTER XXIII.
Mary, during the Flagellation of our Lord.
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I SAW the Blessed Virgin in a continual ecstasy during the time of the
scourging of her Divine Son; she saw and suffered with inexpressible
love and grief all the torments he was enduring. She groaned feebly,
and her eyes were, red with weeping. A large veil covered her person,
and she leant upon Mary of Heli, her eldest sister, [12] who was old
and extremely like their mother, Anne. Mary of Cleophas, the daughter
of Mary of Heli, was there also. The friends of Jesus and Mary stood
around the latter; they wore large veils, appeared overcome with grief
and anxiety, and were weeping as if in the momentary expectation of
death. The dress of Mary was blue; it was long, and partly covered by a
cloak made of white wool, and her veil was of rather a yellow white.
Magdalen was totally beside herself from grief, and her hair was
floating loosely under her veil.
When Jesus fell down at the foot of the pillar, after the flagellation,
I saw Claudia Procles, the wife of Pilate, send some large pieces of
linen to the Mother of God. I know not whether she thought that Jesus
would be set free, and that his Mother would then require linen to
dress his wounds, or whether this compassionate lady was aware of the
use which would be made of her present. At the termination of the
scourging, Mary came to herself for a time, and saw her Divine Son all
torn and mangled, being led away by the archers after the scourging: he
wiped his eyes, which were filled with blood, that he might look at his
Mother, and she stretched out her hands towards him, and continued to
look at the bloody traces of his footsteps. I soon after saw Mary and
Magdalen approach the pillar where Jesus had been scourged; the mob
were at a distance, and they were partly concealed by the other holy
women, and by a few kind-hearted persons who had joined them; they
knelt down on the ground near the pillar, and wiped up the sacred blood
with the linen which Claudia Procles had sent. John was not at that
time with the holy women, who were about twenty in number. The sons of
Simeon and of Obed, and Veronica, as also the two nephews of Joseph of
Arimathea--Aram and Themni--were in the Temple, and appeared to be
overwhelmed with grief. It was not more than nine o'clock A.M. when the
scourging terminated.
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