Lacy Collison Morley The Power of the Dead to Return to Earth


The Power of the Dead to Return to Earth
By Lacy Collison-Morley
(c) 2006 by www.HorrorMasters.com
Though there is no period at which the ancients do not seem to have believed in a future
life, continual confusion prevails when they come to picture the existence led by man in
the other world, as we see from the sixth book of the Ćneid. Combined with the elaborate
mythology of Greece, we are confronted with the primitive belief of Italy, and doubtless
of Greece too a belief supported by all the religious rites in connection with the dead
that the spirits of the departed lived on in the tomb with the body. As cremation gradually
superseded burial, the idea took shape that the soul might have an existence of its own,
altogether independent of the body, and a place of abode was assigned to it in a hole in
the centre of the earth, where it lived on in eternity with other souls.
This latter view seems to have become the official theory, at least in Italy, in classical
days. In the gloomy, horrible Etruscan religion, the shades were supposed to be in charge
of the Conductor of the Dead a repulsive figure, always represented with wings and
long, matted hair and a hammer, whose appearance was afterwards imitated in the dress
of the man who removed the dead from the arena. Surely something may be said for
Gaston Boissier s suggestion that Dante s Tuscan blood may account to some extent for
the gruesome imagery of the Inferno.
Cicero tells us that it was generally believed that the dead lived on beneath the earth,
and special provision was made for them in every Latin town in the  mundus, a deep
trench which was dug before the  pomerium was traced, and regarded as the particular
entrance to the lower world for the dead of the town in question. The trench was vaulted
over, so that it might correspond more or less with the sky, a gap being left in the vault
which was closed with the stone of the departed the  lapis manalis. Corn was thrown
into the trench, which was filled up with earth, and an altar erected over it. On three
solemn days in the year August 25, October 5, and November 8 the trench was
opened and the stone removed, the dead thus once more having free access to the world
above, where the usual offerings were made to them.
These provisions clearly show an official belief that death did not create an impassable
barrier between the dead and the living. The spirits of the departed still belonged to the
city of their birth, and took an interest in their old home. They could even return to it on
the days when  the trench of the gods of gloom lies open and the very jaws of hell yawn
wide. Their rights must be respected, if evil was to be averted from the State. In fact, the
dead were gods with altars of their own, and Cornelia, the mother of the Gracchi, could
write to her sons,  You will make offerings to me and invoke your parent as a god.
Their cult was closely connected with that of the Lares the gods of the hearth, which
symbolized a fixed abode in contrast with the early nomad life. Indeed, there is
practically no distinction between the Lares and the Manes, the souls of the good dead.
But the dead had their own festival, the  Dies Parentales, held from the 13th to the 21st
of February, in Rome; and in Greece the  Genesia, celebrated on the 5th of BSdromion,
towards the end of September, about which we know very little.
There is nothing more characteristic of paganism than the passionate longing of the
average man to perpetuate his memory after death in the world round which all his hopes
and aspirations clung. Cicero uses it as an argument for immortality. Many men left large
sums to found colleges to celebrate their memories and feast at their tombs on stated
occasions. Lucian laughs at this custom when he represents the soul of the ordinary man
in the n world as a mere bodiless shade that vanishes at a touch like smoke. It subsists
ext
on the libations and offerings it receives from the living, and those who have no friends
or relatives on earth are starving and famished. Violators of tombs were threatened with
the curse of dying the last of their race a curse which Macaulay, with his intense family
affection, considered the most awful that could be devised by man; and the fact that the
tombs were built by the high road, so that the dead might be cheered by the greeting of
the passer-by, lends an additional touch of sadness to a walk among the crumbling ruins
that line the Latin or the Appian Way outside Rome to-day.
No one of the moderns has caught the pagan feeling towards death better than GiosuŁ
Carducci, a true spiritual descendant of the great Romans of old, if ever there was one.
He tells how, one glorious June day, he was sitting in school, listening to the priest
outraging the verb  amo, when his eyes wandered to the window and lighted on a
cherry-tree, red with fruit, and then strayed away to the hills and the sky and the distant
curve of the seashore. All Nature was teeming with life, and he felt an answering thrill,
when suddenly, as if from the very fountains of being within him, there welled up a
consciousness of death, and with it the formless nothing, and a vision of himself lying
cold, motionless, dumb in the black earth, while above him the birds sang, the trees
rustled in the wind, the rivers ran on m their course, and the living revelled in the warm
sun, bathed in its divine light. This first vision of death often haunted him in later years;
and one realizes that such must often have been the feelings of the Romans, and still
more often of the Greeks, for the joy of the Greek in life was far greater than that of the
Roman. Peace was the only boon that death could bring to a pagan, and  Pax tecum
ćterna is among the commonest of the inscriptions. The life beyond the grave was at
best an unreal and joyless copy of an earthly existence, and Achilles told Odysseus that
he would rather be the serf of a poor man upon earth than Achilles among the shades.
When we come to inquire into the appearance of ghosts revisiting the glimpses of the
moon, we find, as we should expect, that they are a vague, unsubstantial copy of their
former selves on earth. In Homer the shade of Patroclus, which visited Achilles in a
vision as he slept by the sea-shore, looks exactly as Patroclus had looked on earth, even
down to the clothes. Hadrian s famous  animula vagula blandula gives the same idea,
and it would be difficult to imagine a disembodied spirit which retains its personality and
returns to earth again except as a kind of immaterial likeness of its earthly self. We often
hear of the extreme pallor of ghosts, which was doubtless due to their being bloodless and
to the pallor of death itself. Propertius conceived of them as skeletons; but the
unsubstantial, shadowy aspect is by far the commonest, and best harmonizes with the life
they were supposed to lead. (c) 2006 by www.HorrorMasters.com
Hitherto we have been dealing with the spirits of the dead who have been duly buried
and are at rest, making their appearance among men only at stated intervals, regulated by
the religion of the State. The lot of the dead who have not been vouchsafed the trifling
boon of a handful of earth cast upon their bones was very different. They had not yet
been admitted to the world below, and were forced to wander for a hundred years before
they might enter Charon s boat. Ćneas beheld them on the banks of the Styx, stretching
out their hands  riple ulterioris amore. The shade of Patroclus describes its hapless state
to Achilles, as does that of Elpenor to Odysseus, when they meet in the lower world. It is
not surprising that the ancients attached the highest importance to the duty of burying the
dead, and that Pausanias blames Lysander for not burying the bodies of Philocles and the
four thousand slain at Ćgospotami, seeing that the Athenians even buried the Persian
dead after Marathon.
The spirits of the unburied were usually held to be bound, more or less, to the spot
where their bodies lay, and to be able to enter into communication with the living with
comparative ease, even if they did not actually haunt them. They were, in f
act, evil spirits
which had to be propitiated and honoured in special rites. Their appearances among the
living were not regulated by religion. They wandered at will over the earth, belonging
neither to this world nor to the next, restless and malignant, unable to escape from the
trammels of mortal life, in the joys of which they had no part. Thus, in the Phćdo we
read of souls  prowling about tombs and sepulchres, near which, as they tell us, are seen
certain ghostly apparitions of souls which have not departed pure. . . . These must be the
souls, not of the good, but of the evil, which are compelled to wander about such places
in payment of the penalty of their former evil way of life.
Apuleius classifies the spirits of the departed for us. The Manes are the good people,
not to be feared so long as their rites are duly performed, as we have already seen;
Lemures are disembodied spirits; while Larvć are the ghosts that haunt houses. Apuleius,
however, is wholly uncritical, and the distinction between Larvć and Lemures is
certainly not borne out by facts.
The Larvć had distinct attributes, and were thought to cause epilepsy or madness. They
were generally treated more or less as a joke, and are spoken of much as we speak of a
bogey. They appear to have been entrusted with the torturing of the dead, as we see from
the saying,  Only the Larvae war with the dead. In Seneca s Apocolocyntosis, when the
question of the deification of the late Emperor Claudius is laid before a meeting of the
gods, Father Janus gives it as his opinion that no more mortals should be treated in this
way, and that  anyone who, contrary to this decree, shall hereafter be made, addressed, or
painted as a god, should be delivered over to the Larvć and flogged at the next games.
Larva also means a skeleton, and Trimalchio, following the Egyptian custom, has one
brought in and placed on the table during his famous feast. It is, as one would expect, of
silver, and the millionaire freedman points the usual moral  Let us eat, drink, and be
merry, for to-morrow we die.
The Larvć were regular characters in the Atellane farces at Rome, where they
performed various  danses macabres. Can these possibly be the prototypes of the
Dances of Death so popular in the Middle Ages? We find something very similar on the
well-known silver cups discovered at Bosco Reale, though Death itself does not seem to
have been represented in this way. Some of the designs in the medieval series would
certainly have appealed to the average bourgeois Roman of the Trimalchio type e.g.,
 Les Trois Vifs et les Trois Morts, the three men riding gaily out hunting and meeting
their own skeletons. Such crude contrasts are just what one would expect to find at
Pompeii.
Lemures and Larvć are often confused, but Lemures is the regular word for the dead
not at rest the  Lemuri, or spirits of the churchyard, of some parts of modern Italy.
They were evil spirits, propitiated in early days with blood. Hence the first gladiatorial
games were given in connection with funerals. Both in Greece and in Rome there were
special festivals for appeasing these restless spirits. Originally they were of a public
character, for murder was common in primitive times, and such spirits would be
numerous, as is proved by the festival lasting three days.
In Athens the Nemesia were held during Anthesterion (February-March). As in Rome,
the days were unlucky. Temples were closed and business was suspended, for the dead
were abroad. In the morning the doors were smeared with pitch, and those in the house
chewed whitethorn to keep off the evil spirits. On the last day of the festival offerings
were made to Hermes, and the dead were formally bidden to depart.
Ovid describes the Lemuria or Lemuralia. They took place in May, which was
consequently regarded as an unlucky month for marriages, and is still so regarded almost
as universally in England today as it was in Rome during the principate of Augustus. The
name of the festival Ovid derives from Remus, as the ghost of his murdered brother was
said to have appeared to Romulus in his sleep and to have demanded burial. Hence the
institution of the Lemuria.
The head of the family walked through the house with bare feet at dead of night,
making the mystic sign with his first and fourth fingers extended, the other fingers being
turned inwards and the thumb crossed over them, in case he might run against an
unsubstantial spirit as he moved noiselessly along This is the sign of  le corna, held to
be infallible against the Evil Eye in modern Italy. After solemnly washing his hands, he
places black beans in his mouth, and throws others over his shoulders, saying,  With
these beans do I redeem me and mine. He repeats this ceremony nine times without
looking round, and the spirits are thought to follow unseen and pick up the beans. Then
he purifies himself once more and clashes brass, and bids the demons leave his house.
When he has repeated nine times  Manes exite paterni, he looks round, and the
ceremony is over, and the restless ghosts have been duly laid for a year.
Lamić haunted rooms, which had to be fumigated with sulphur, while some mystic
rites were performed with eggs before they could be expelled.
The dead not yet at rest were divided into three classes those who had died before
their time, the łń, who had to wander till the span of their natural life was completed;
those who had met with violent deaths, the Ł; and the unburied, the . In
the Hymn to Hecate, to whom they were especially attached, they are represented as
following in her train and taking part in her nightly revels in human shape. The lot of the
murdered is no better, and executed criminals belong to the same class.
Spirits of this kind were supposed to haunt the place where their bodies lay. Hence they
were regarded as demons, and were frequently entrusted with the carrying out of the
strange curses, which have been found in their tombs, or in wells where a man had been
drowned, or even in the sea, written on leaden tablets, often from right to left, or in queer
characters, so as to be illegible, with another tablet fastened over them by means of a nail,
symbolizing the binding effect it was hoped they would have the  Defixiones, to give
them their Latin name, which are very numerous among the inscriptions. So real was the
belief in these curses that the elder Pliny says that everyone is afraid of being placed
under evil spells; and they are frequently referred to in antiquity.


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