By

Sara Dover /

CBS News/ March 13, 2013, 3:36 PM

Sistine Sea Gull: Joke or symbolism?

A bird sits on top of the chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel as the College of Cardinals attempt to elect a new Pope on March 13, 2013 in Vatican City, Vatican.

A bird sits on top of the chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel as the College of Cardinals attempt to elect a new Pope on March 13, 2013 in Vatican City, Vatican. / Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

While thousands of umbrella-clad onlookers waited for what later turned out to be white smoke to billow out of the Sistine Chapel's chimney Wednesday and declare Pope Francis elected, some creatures had a better view than others.

Perched on top of the chimney for quite some time was a sea gull, amusing those watching live coverage of the Vatican on a dreary day two of the papal conclave.

For some, the bird (or birds, as there were several flying in the area) provided amusement. He quickly burst into Twitter superstardom, and a Twitter handle, @SaintSeagull, popped up shortly after the bird's debut.

So did @Sistine_Seagull, and @SistineSeagull.

For others, the laridae -- who briefly flew from the chimney and came back -- was symbolism for smoke soon to come, or something else.

"If the seagull catches fire from the pipe, could be considered a phoenix, and therefore a symbol of resurrection," tweeted Edward-Isaac Dovere, a reporter for Politico.

"I was about to report the seagull had left, then it came back, then it left again ... clearly a symbol of the coveted undecided voter," tweeted Robert Mackey, reporter and editor of The New York Times news blog The Lede.

Michael Peppard of Commonweal magazine took a more religious analysis, explaining the gull's symbolism in Roman history:

"The white bird signals white smoke later today," he wrote. "We are probably meant to associate this with the most famous bird omen in papal history, the election of Pope Fabian (236-250). According to Eusebius (Ecclesiastical History, 6.29), Fabianus was not among the likely papabili, but the Holy Spirit moved."

Whatever its significance, the bird provided some distraction from the waiting. Not long before white smoke spilled from the chimney, the gull flew away. Despite the meaning some more religious pope watchers saw in the bird, some wondered if its Internet self may have jumped the shark.

"The world did not need," tweeted Jonathan Haynes, a web news editor for the Guardian, "a Twitter account for the papal seagull."

A seagull glides past the chimney on the roof of the Sistine Chapel, in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, Tuesday, March 12, 2013. The most gazed-at item at the Vatican this week will be a humble, copper, two-meter (six-foot) high chimney that will pipe-out puffs of smoke to tell the world if there's a new pope. Black smoke means "not yet." White smoke means "pope elected."

/ AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky

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    Sara Dover is an associate news editor for CBSNews.com

12 Comments Add a Comment
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troungshixam says:
For the record the Church never had a problem with pedophile priests. The church had a problem with homosexual priests. Creeping liberalism caused that problem to become fairly severe in the 80's and 90's, but is better now.
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bobhobbs says:
Is this the "Divine Paraclete" or the "Holy Spirit" wishing 'Godspeed" to the new Pope, the Jesuit "Black Pope" Francis?
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DrJohnWarren says:
It's cold in Rome. The Sistine Chapel is heated. Warm air rises. The chimney is an open vent between the chapel and the open air.

The seagull probably had a cold ass.
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nursedeb49 says:
I was raised a Catholic and went to parochial school, St. Elizabeth in Louisville Ky. While I was there Father Woods and Miller were there (google them) they are 2 of the most prolific pedophiles in that city's history, fortunately for me, their targets were boys. When I was a little older I learned the archdioces of Lou. was well aware of this and kept moving them around to blue collar areas. How anyone can still consider this a "faith" or attend this church is WAAAYYY beyond me. The cover up went all the way to the Vatican, hope the bird makes a mess before he realizes he landed in a bad spot and moves on unmolested.
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yelobrikroad says:
Yes yes! The seagull symbolized many things:

--The white of its feathers -imminent decision (white smoke)
--The grey of its feathers -age of the new Pope (Pope Francis is 76)
--The tiny legs that it perched on -the fragile bond the church has with its parishioners in these times
--The bird flying away -the escape of the last Pope
--The bird sitting quietly -the stance the church takes on pedophilia.
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fantomas4 says:
The seagull figured that it was fine to take a dump on an already existing pile of crap.
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displeased2 says:
grumpyoldfart, I don't agree with you often, but you're right on with this story. I think anybody who camped out in the square to stare at this chimney, or those who consider this bird as significant or as some sort of symbolism, are truly insane.
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micmac666 says:
Sometimes a seagull is just a seagull.
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foo8259 replies:
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Exactly! Anyway I hope that provided some amusement to the bored or misled masses.
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kbbpll says:
Seagulls are rats with wings. Perhaps that's the part with symbolism.
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neologistic says:
But not at all odd that with thousands of bored photographers hanging around for hours, they found something vaguely relevant!
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