Another stone, crow and haar.
Same graveyard, same crow, same haar (sea fog), another day.
Urns, draped or otherwise, often atop a column, are common monuments in Victorian graveyards. They hark back to Roman times when cremation was more common than burial and the ashes were placed in a simple marble box or pot known as an urna, from the Latin urere, meaning "to burn."
The modern draped urn, is usually taken to mean that the soul has departed the shrouded body for its journey to heaven.
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