登陆注册
15677000000036

第36章

I was by no means pleased with a story, told me by a man of very great quality of a relation of mine, and one who had given a very good account of himself both in peace and war, that, coming to die in a very old age, of excessive pain of the stone, he spent the last hours of his life in an extraordinary solicitude about ordering the honour and ceremony of his funeral, pressing all the men of condition who came to see him to engage their word to attend him to his grave: importuning this very prince, who came to visit him at his last gasp, with a most earnest supplication that he would order his family to be there, and presenting before him several reasons and examples to prove that it was a respect due to a man of his condition; and seemed to die content, having obtained this promise, and appointed the method and order of his funeral parade. I have seldom heard of so persistent a vanity.

Another, though contrary curiosity (of which singularity, also, I do not want domestic example), seems to be somewhat akin to this, that a man shall cudgel his brains at the last moments of his life to contrive his obsequies to so particular and unusual a parsimony as of one servant with a lantern, I see this humour commended, and the appointment of Marcus.

Emilius Lepidus, who forbade his heirs to bestow upon his hearse even the common ceremonies in use upon such occasions. Is it yet temperance and frugality to avoid expense and pleasure of which the use and knowledge are imperceptible to us? See, here, an easy and cheap reformation. If instruction were at all necessary in this case, I should be of opinion that in this, as in all other actions of life, each person should regulate the matter according to his fortune; and the philosopher Lycon prudently ordered his friends to dispose of his body where they should think most fit, and as to his funeral, to order it neither too superfluous nor too mean. For my part, I should wholly refer the ordering of this ceremony to custom, and shall, when the time comes, accordingly leave it to their discretion to whose lot it shall fall to do me that last office. "Totus hic locus est contemnendus in nobis, non negligendus in nostris;"--["The place of our sepulture is to be contemned by us, but not to be neglected by our friends."--Cicero, Tusc. i. 45.]--and it was a holy saying of a saint, "Curatio funeris, conditio sepultura:, pompa exequiarum, magis sunt vivorum solatia, quam subsidia mortuorum." --["The care of death, the place of sepulture, the pomps of obsequies, are rather consolations to the living than succours to the dead. "August. De Civit. Dei, i. 12.]-- Which made Socrates answer Crito, who, at death, asked him how he would be buried: "How you will," said he. "If I were to concern myself beyond the present about this affair, I should be most tempted, as the greatest satisfaction of this kind, to imitate those who in their lifetime entertain themselves with the ceremony and honours of their own obsequies beforehand, and are pleased with beholding their own dead countenance in marble. Happy are they who can gratify their senses by insensibility, and live by their death!

I am ready to conceive an implacable hatred against all popular domination, though I think it the most natural and equitable of all, so oft as I call to mind the inhuman injustice of the people of Athens, who, without remission, or once vouchsafing to hear what they had to say for themselves, put to death their brave captains newly returned triumphant from a naval victory they had obtained over the Lacedaemonians near the Arginusian Isles, the most bloody and obstinate engagement that ever the Greeks fought at sea; because (after the victory) they followed up the blow and pursued the advantages presented to them by the rule of war, rather than stay to gather up and bury their dead. And the execution is yet rendered more odious by the behaviour of Diomedon, who, being one of the condemned, and a man of most eminent virtue, political and military, after having heard the sentence, advancing to speak, no audience till then having been allowed, instead of laying before them his own cause, or the impiety of so cruel a sentence, only expressed a solicitude for his judges' preservation, beseeching the gods to convert this sentence to their good, and praying that, for neglecting to fulfil the vows which he and his companions had made (with which he also acquainted them) in acknowledgment of so glorious a success, they might not draw down the indignation of the gods upon them; and so without more words went courageously to his death.

Fortune, a few years after, punished them in the same kind; for Chabrias, captain-general of their naval forces, having got the better of Pollis, Admiral of Sparta, at the Isle of Naxos, totally lost the fruits of his victory, one of very great importance to their affairs, in order not to incur the danger of this example, and so that he should not lose a few bodies of his dead friends that were floating in the sea, gave opportunity to a world of living enemies to sail away in safety, who afterwards made them pay dear for this unseasonable superstition:--Quaeris, quo jaceas, post obitum, loco?

Quo non nata jacent."

["Dost ask where thou shalt lie after death?

Where things not born lie, that never being had."]

Seneca, Tyoa. Choro ii. 30.

This other restores the sense of repose to a body without a soul:

"Neque sepulcrum, quo recipiatur, habeat: portum corporis, ubi, remissa human, vita, corpus requiescat a malis."

["Nor let him have a sepulchre wherein he may be received, a haven for his body, where, life being gone, that body may rest from its woes."--Ennius, ap. Cicero, Tusc. i. 44.]

As nature demonstrates to us that several dead things retain yet an occult relation to life; wine changes its flavour and complexion in cellars, according to the changes and seasons of the vine from whence it came; and the flesh of--venison alters its condition in the powdering-tub, and its taste according to the laws of the living flesh of its kind, as it is said.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 会猎天下

    会猎天下

    肖天空,本是一名外表不出众,且在人前不突出的能力者。但是在大学的第一天,他破例使用了自己的能力救下了一个少女。此后,他更是入黑道、进官场,也因此身边的绝世红颜慢慢多了起来。但是他的终点是哪呢?又能走到哪呢?
  • 娱乐小天后:哥哥我们不熟

    娱乐小天后:哥哥我们不熟

    前世的一次偶然,她来到他家,成为他独一无二,被他宠上天了的妹妹。相处了十年,她的亲生父母寻回了她,他们分隔两地,却依然没有断了联系,在离开的八年中,她深知自己已经对他情根深种了,为他毅然回国,却得知他早已有了心爱的女子。可就是他所谓的心爱的女子策划了一场绑架案,逼他二选一,最终他亲手葬送了她的生命。临死前,她始终带着他看不懂的笑,“夜槿轩,若有来生,我定不要再爱上你!”她在心底许下了誓言。睁开眼,却发现回到了2年前,她对他形同陌路,可他却抵死纠缠,不知不觉中,她早已占满了他的心,再也容不下任何人了。可他的悔悟,他的改变,他的表白,他的挽留,她可会接受?
  • 盗猎图

    盗猎图

    在可可西里的草原生狂奔,手握猎刃见血封喉!李想开始莫名的兴奋起来,他觉得这才是人生,在一个未知而又神秘的地方释放青春就是一种神圣的行为!一张盗猎图改变了李想的都市生活,从此他的路途满是凶险刺激,魔鬼谷,野耗牛,千年狼王,每一次凶险背后都是一个惊天秘密,释放吧,年轻的猎人!
  • 女穿男:废材变superboy

    女穿男:废材变superboy

    一缕天才型性格古怪的少女意外身亡,重生到了一个废材富家弟子身上,会怎么样呢?天才型的她会给这个富家子弟的身边的人带来什么样的惊喜呢?让我们一起走进——《女穿男:废材变superboy》吧!!
  • 纹荒

    纹荒

    怒火为何燃,眼泪为谁落。天性不可夺,吾辈心中亦有惑!修纹炼体除奸恶,道法阴阳为传说!这是一个叫做纹荒的大陆,宗派林立,群雄四起,争霸天地。一个在月食之夜降生的男孩,偶然而又必然的逐渐成长为了这片天地的主角!炼阳体、修阴纹,铸就万古传说!
  • 珈蓝之夜

    珈蓝之夜

    历尽天下沧桑,渡尽人间苦乐。纵然前路险恶迷茫,我亦前行无所畏惧。只因你给了我新生,我定然誓死不后退。汝说众生皆有神灵所创?可笑,天下万物吾皆不惧!
  • 滚石——流水

    滚石——流水

    小城学校一个非常规班级的成长历程与一代人的青春变演变。是时代改变了我们,还是,我们改变了这个时代
  • 时光沙漏:夏梦未绝

    时光沙漏:夏梦未绝

    他是她世界里的光,半程人生,她苦求时光倒流;她是他心脏里的暖,一世轮回,他守护十年之期。然而,当时空的主摆下一个困局,他们挣扎、矛盾、受尽苦楚,只为站在彼此的身旁,看他温柔似水,看她笑靥如花。执念,深入骨髓;失去,痛彻心扉。真相铺开,恍然如梦,这一次,他是否愿意放手,让她活?沙漏里,点点时光,滴滴记忆,他愿用永生的孤独换她一世的陪伴。
  • 大罗金天

    大罗金天

    大千世界,无奇不有,救世主圣帝临死前说过,我会让下一个圣帝诞生的。'于是,一位少年在修仙路上遇到数种宝物,背负重任,灭除古魔!
  • 我在异世之超级抽奖系统

    我在异世之超级抽奖系统

    一切的结束都是开始。一切的一切只是过往云烟。看看我们的宅男主角是怎么样用抽奖系统一路碾压各种鬼怪的。最终会通往什么样的方向。敬请期待。第一次写书,如果有什么不合理的地方请给我醒,我会尽量改正的,谢谢大家了。