The Eternal Belief in Immortality & Worship of the Dead. James George FrazerЧитать онлайн книгу.
rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_3018fb22-3666-5505-b44c-908949926cac">272 The final ceremony which brings the period of mourning to an end is curious and entirely different from the one observed by the Arunta on the same occasion. When the bones have been taken down from the tree, an arm-bone is put carefully apart from the rest. Then the skull is smashed, and the fragments together with all the rest of the bones except the arm-bone, are buried in a hollow ant-hill near the tree. Afterwards the arm-bone is wrapt up in paper-bark and wound round with fur-string, so as to make a torpedo-shaped parcel, which is kept by a tribal mother of the deceased in her rude hovel of branches, till, after the lapse of some days or weeks, the time comes for the last ceremony of all. On that day a design emblematic of the totem of the deceased is drawn on the ground, and beside it a shallow trench is dug about a foot deep and fifteen feet long. Over this trench a number of men, elaborately decorated with down of various colours, stand straddle-legged, while a line of women, decorated with red and yellow ochre, crawl along the trench under the long bridge made by the straddling legs of the men. The last woman carries the arm-bone of the dead in its parcel, and as soon as she emerges from the trench, the bone is snatched from her by a kinsman of the deceased, who carries it to a man standing ready with an uplifted axe beside the totemic drawing. On receiving the bone, the man at once smashes it, hastily buries it in a small pit beside the totemic emblem of the departed, and closes the opening with a large flat stone, signifying thereby that the season of mourning is over and that the dead man or woman has been gathered to his or her totem. The totemic design, beside which the arm-bone is buried, represents the spot at which the totemic ancestor of the deceased finally went down into the earth. When once the arm-bone has thus been broken and laid in its last resting-place, the soul of the dead person, which they describe as being of about the size of a grain of sand, is supposed to go back to the place where it camped long ago in a previous incarnation, there to remain with the souls of other men and women of the same totem until the time comes for it to be born again.273
General conclusion as to the belief in immortality and the worship of the dead among the Australian aborigines.
This must conclude what I have to say as to the belief in immortality and the worship of the dead among the aborigines of Australia. The evidence I have adduced is sufficient to prove that these savages firmly believe both in the existence of the human soul after death and in the power which it can exert for good or evil over the survivors. On the whole the dominant motive in their treatment of the dead appears to be fear rather than affection. Yet the attention which many tribes pay to the comfort of the departed by providing them with huts, food, water, fire, clothing, implements and weapons, may not be dictated by purely selfish motives; in any case they are clearly intended to please and propitiate the ghosts, and therefore contain the germs of a regular worship of the dead.
Footnote 216: (return)
E. J. Eyre, Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into Central Australia (London, 1845), ii. 349.
Footnote 217: (return)
A. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Victoria," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.S. iii. (1865) p. 245.
Footnote 218: (return)
P. Beveridge, in Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales, xvii. (1883) pp. 29 sq. Compare R. Brough Smyth, Aborigines of Victoria, i. 100 note.
Footnote 219: (return)
(Sir) G. Grey, Journals of Two Expeditions of Discovery, ii. 332 sq.
Footnote 220: (return)
Rev. J. Roscoe, The Baganda (London, 1911), pp. 109 sqq.
Footnote 221: (return)
E. M. Curr, The Australian Race (Melbourne and London, 1886–1887), i. 87.
Footnote 222: (return)
A. W. Howitt, Native Tribes of South-East Australia, p. 463.
Footnote 223: (return)
A. W. Howitt, op. cit. p. 461.
Footnote 224: (return)
A. W. Howitt, op. cit. p. 473.
Footnote 225: (return)
A. W. Howitt, op. cit. p. 474.
Footnote 226: (return)
F. C. Urquhart, "Legends of the Australian Aborigines," Journal of the Anthropological Institute, xiv. (1885) p. 88.
Footnote 227: (return)
E. M. Curr, The Australian Race, i. 87.
Footnote 228: (return)
Leviticus xix. 28; Deuteronomy xiv. 1.
Footnote 229: (return)
W. Stanbridge, "Tribes in the Central Part of Victoria," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.S. i. (1861) p. 298.
Footnote 230: (return)
R. Brough Smyth, Aborigines of Victoria, i. 105.
Footnote 231: (return)
A. W. Howitt, Native Tribes of South-East Australia, p. 459.
Footnote 232: (return)
A. W. Howitt, op. cit. p. 453.
Footnote 233: (return)
P. Beveridge, in Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales, xvii. (1883) pp. 28, 29.
Footnote 234: (return)
A. W. Howitt, op. cit. p. 466.
Footnote 235: (return)
E. J. Eyre, Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into Central Australia (London, 1845), ii. 347.
Footnote 236: (return)
W. E. Roth, Studies among the North-West-Central