The New York panel shows: at left Zenobius encounters the funeral procession of a youth, and restores him to life. At centre Zenobius finds a group weeping at the death of a porter who had carried the relics of saints (shown as skeletons in a coffin) over the
Apennine range, and restores him to life, with the help of the relics. At right a sub-deacon called Eugenius (who also became a saint) is shown three times: in the bishop's palace interior Zenobius gives him a cup of salt and water, which he carries and then administers to a female relative who had died without receiving the
Last Rites, which brings her back to life. The London miracle panel has three scenes. At left, two young men had treated their mother badly, and been cursed by her. Zenobius
exorcises them. At centre: Zenobius restores to life the son of a "noble lady from
Gaul". She had left him with the bishop while she made a pilgrimage to Rome, and he died. At right, outside the cathedral he restores the sight of a blind beggar, who had promised to become a Christian in that event. In the Dresden panel a single miracle is shown in three scenes, from left to right. A young man is run over by a cart and killed. His distraught mother, a widow, carries him to the church. He is resurrected by a prayer of Zenobius (not shown) and reunited with his mother. At right, Zenobius on his death bed. Some scholars, including
Martin Davies, thought that the surviving series may not be complete, since one of the better known miracles of the saint, where a dead
elm burst into leaf after being touched by the saint's
bier, is not shown in any of these scenes. But this was before the written
Life of Zenobius by Fra Clemente Mazza (1475) was identified as the source, rather than another version; the paintings clearly follow the sequence, details and chapter divisions of this, and the sequence appears complete. ==Style and context==