Page:An Indian Study of Love and Death.pdf/76

72 period of mourning is longer or shorter, according to the degree of the bereavement. It is expected, however, that self-control and the setting aside of “the grief that rises from illusion” will come soonest to those who are most saintly and scholarly. Hence amongst Brahmins, the severest mourning lasts for ten days only.

Then is held a service which involves the communal recognition of the new head of the family. But before the household can be made ready for this, its re-entrance into the civic life, there must be a formal end to the days of sorrow. Each soul must be led to step forth from the darkness of its grief. It must be soothed, puriﬁed, and reconciled to the world and to its own part in it. Such, at least, must have been the thought that led to the composing of one of the deepest and most signiﬁcant benedictions in all the ancient liturgies of the world—the Hindu Prayer for the Re-sanctiﬁcation of Labour after Mourning.