The practice of sacrificing human beings to the dead is not exclusively based on the idea that they require servants and companions. It is extremely probable that the funeral sacrifice of men and animals in many cases involves an intention to vivify the spirits of the deceased with the warm, red sap of life.[306] This seems to be the meaning of the Dahoman custom of pouring blood over the graves of the ancestors of the king.[307] So, also, in Ashanti “human sacrifices are frequent and ordinary, to water the graves of the Kings.”[308] In the German folk-tale known under the name of ‘Faithful John,’ the statue said to the King, “If you, with your own hand, cut off the heads of both your children, and sprinkle me with their blood, I shall be brought to life again.”[309] According to primitive ideas, blood is life; to receive blood is to receive life; the soul of the dead wants to live, and consequently loves blood. The shades in Hades are eager to drink the blood of Odysseus’ sacrifice, that their life may be renewed for a time.[310] And it is all the more important that the soul should get what it desires as it otherwise may come and attack the living. The belief that the bloodless shades leave their graves at night and seek renewed life by drawing the blood of the living, is prevalent in many parts of the world.[311] As late as the eighteenth century this belief caused an epidemic of fear in Hungary, resulting in a general disinterment, and the burning or staking of the suspected bodies.[312] It is also possible that the mutilations and self-bleedings which accompany funerals are partly practised for the purpose of refreshing the departed soul.[313] The Samoans called it “an offering of blood” for the dead when the mourners beat their heads with stones till the blood ran.[314]
[306] Cf. Spencer, Principles of Sociology, i. 288 sq.; Rockholz, Deutscher Glaube und Brauch, i. 55; Sepp, Völkerbrauch bei Hochzeit, Geburt und Tod, p. 154; Trumbull, Blood Covenant, p. 110 sqq.
[307] Reade, Savage Africa, p. 51 sq.
[308] Bowdich, Mission from Cape Castle to Ashantee, p. 289.
[309] Grimm, Kinder- und Hausmärchen, p. 29 sq.
[310] Odyssey, xi. 153.
[311] Trumbull, Blood Covenant, p. 114 sq.
[312] Farrer, Primitive Manners and Customs, p. 23 sq.
[313] Cf. Spencer, Principles of Sociology, i. 181 sq.
[314] Turner, Nineteen Years in Polynesia, p. 227.