Close Right Panel

B.3 Ch. 9: Women Burning Themselves with Their Deceased Husbands

B.3 Ch. 9: Women Burning Themselves with Their Deceased Husbands Page of 417 B.3 Ch. 9: Women Burning Themselves with Their Deceased Husbands Text size:minusplusRestore normal size  Mail page Print this page
164                  THE BURNING OF WIDOWS          book iii
shall live to watch over the education of their children. Those to whom the Governors peremptorily refuse to grant permission to burn themselves pass the remainder of their lives in severe penances and in doing charitable deeds. There are some who frequent the great highways either to boil water with vegetables, and give it as a drink to passers by, or to keep fire always ready to light the pipes of those who desire to smoke tobacco. There are others among them who make a vow to eat nothing but what they And undigested in the droppings of oxen, cows, and buffaloes,1 and do still more absurd things.
The Governor, seeing that all the remonstrances with women, who are urged to burn themselves even by their relatives and by the Brahmans, fail to turn them from the damnable resolution which they have taken to die in so cruel a fashion, when his secretary indicates by a sign that he has received a bribe, at length allows them to do what they wish, and in a rage tells all the idolaters who accompany them that they may ' go to the devil'.
Immediately on permission being obtained, all kinds of music are heard, and with the sound of drums, flutes, and other instruments, all go to the house of the deceased, and thence, as I .have said, accompany the body to the margin of a river or tank, where it is to be burned.
All the relatives and friends of the widow who desires to die after her husband congratulate her beforehand on the good fortune which she is about to acquire in the other world, and on the glory which all the members of the caste derive from her noble resolution. She dresses herself as for her wedding-day, and is conducted in triumph to the place where she is to be burnt. A great noise is made with instruments of music and the voices of the women who follow, singing hymns to the glory of the unhappy one who is about to die. The Brahmans accompanying her exhort her to show resolu­tion and courage, and many Europeans believe that in order to remove the fear of that death which man naturally abhors, she is given some kind of drink that takes away her senses and removes all apprehension which the preparations for her 1 See i. 226 above.
B.3 Ch. 9: Women Burning Themselves with Their Deceased Husbands Page of 417 B.3 Ch. 9: Women Burning Themselves with Their Deceased Husbands
Table Of Contents bullet Annotate/ Highlight
Tavernier: Travels in India II
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page