Queen to pope on her gift: "I hope that is unusual for you"

Queen's informal meeting with pope a sign of how times have changed

VATICAN CITY -- Queen Elizabeth II - bearing a basket of honey, whiskey and other goodies from the royal estates - paid a visit to Pope Francis at the Vatican on Thursday. The pontiff returned the courtesy with a gift for Prince George, Elizabeth's great-grandson.

The Argentine-born pope presented the queen with a stone orb topped with a sharp cross, saying it's for "el ninetto" - a term of endearment for little child. Elizabeth said George "will be thrilled by that - when he's a little older."

The exchange of gifts capped a meeting that included just under 20 minutes of private talk between Elizabeth, her husband, Prince Philip and Francis - with communication facilitated by an interpreter. Francis did say "Welcome" in English when the royal couple arrived, about 20 minutes late for their appointment in a small room off the public audience hall.

"Sorry to keep you waiting," Elizabeth told Francis. "We were having a very pleasant lunch with the president." She was referring to Italy's head of state, Giorgio Napolitano, who, with his wife, Cleo, hosted the queen and Philip for lunch at the presidential Quirinal palace.

The white-gloved monarch had arrived earlier in the day in Rome wearing a lilac-colored spring coat and matching hat that are practically the same colors of the wisteria blooming over much of the Italian capital. Previously, Elizabeth had met with four pontiffs, starting with Pius XII in 1951, a year before her accession to the throne.

Elizabeth is head of the Anglican church. There was no immediate word on what was discussed in the meeting with Francis, who is now in his second year as pontiff.

Elizabeth told the pope that the jar of honey in the wicker picnic hamper "is from my garden" at Buckingham Palace. "I hope that is unusual for you."

Francis looked startled when the prince at one point held up a bottle of Balmoral whiskey, from the royal estate in Scotland. Among the goodies were a bottle of cider and a dozen eggs.

Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, have an audience with Pope Francis during their one-day visit to Rome April 3, 2014, in Vatican City. Getty Images

The queen's day in Rome was a makeup visit. Illness had forced her to cancel a 2013 trip to Rome when she was supposed to see Napolitano.

"She doesn't like leaving obligations unfulfilled so she was determined to reinstate that visit," Britain's ambassador to the Holy See, Nigel Baker, told Vatican Radio.

Obama: Pope Francis has power to "shake people's conscience"

There's been a well-worn path to Francis' door since his election, CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips reports. President Obama was there just last week. Russian President Vladimir Putin was there late last year. It can be useful for a politician of whatever stripe to be seen with a pope with this kind of popularity.

And Vatican writers - like Massimo Franco - see another reason.

"The church, the Catholic Church, is coming back on the international stage as a mediator, so it's a key position for all the leaders all over the west to come and greet the pope," he said.
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