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Chapter 11 § 71. Lamenting of the Dead.
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A Day in Old Athens, by William Stearns Davis (1910) Professor of Ancient History at the University of Minnesota |
Chapter XI. The Funerals.
71. Lamenting of the Dead.--Around this funeral bed the relatives
and friends keep a gloomy vigil. The Athenians after all are
southern born, and when excited seem highly emotional people. There
are stern laws dating from Solon's day against the worst excesses,
but what now occurs seems violent enough. The widow is beating
her breast, tearing her hair, gashing her cheeks with her finger
nails. Lycophron's elderly sister has ashes sprinkled upon her gray
head and ever and anon utters piteous wails. The slave women in
the background keep up a hideous moaning. The men present do not
think it undignified to utter loud lamentation and to shed frequent
tears. Least commendable of all (from a modern standpoint) are the
hired dirge singers, who maintain a most melancholy chant, all the
time beating their breasts, and giving a perfect imitation of frantic
grief. This has probably continued day and night, the mourners
perhaps taking turns by relays.
All in all it is well that Greek custom enjoins the actual funeral,
at least, on the second day following the death.[*] The "shade"
of the deceased is not supposed to find rest in the nether world
until after the proper obsequies.[+] To let a corpse lie several
days without final disposition will bring down on any family severe
reproach. In fact, on few points are the Greeks more sensitive
than on this subject of prompt burial or cremation. After a land
battle the victors are bound never to push their vengeance so far
as to refuse a "burial truce" to the vanquished; and it is a doubly
unlucky admiral who lets his crews get drowned in a sea fight,
without due effort to recover the corpses afterward and to give
them proper disposition on land.
[*]It must be remembered that the Greeks had no skilled embalmers
at their service, and that they lived in a decidedly warm climate.
[+]See the well-known case of the wandering shade of Patrocius
demanding the proper obsequies from Achilles (Iliad, XXIII. 71).
Section 72
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This resource page is copyright © 2002 N.S. Gill.