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We may be dead and we may be gone
At the end of last week, there was a story in the London Evening Standard about some workmen causing havoc in a Paddington graveyard.
"Workmen have desecrated an 18th century burial ground by destroying scores of ancient tombs," trumpeted the opening sentence, "some of which belonged to children."
Now, really this is quite a dull story. Some workmen had to dig out a wall, they uncovered some ancient gravestones, they smashed them to continue their digging. Not really what they should have done (in my opinion), but hardly screaming-banner-headline stuff.
What confuses me is the idea that, to make things worse, some of the graves belonged to children. I understand the LES wants to try and make every story as dramatic as it can, but is there actually anyone, anywhere, who thinks it worse to desecrate a child's grave than an adult's?
I've always struggled with the idea that a child's death is more tragic than an adult's (in the abstract, I mean - I understand it's a tragedy to, say, the child's parents). But that this should carry on into the hereafter to make a child's grave more sacred than an adult's... well, I just don't get it.
"Workmen have desecrated an 18th century burial ground by destroying scores of ancient tombs," trumpeted the opening sentence, "some of which belonged to children."
Now, really this is quite a dull story. Some workmen had to dig out a wall, they uncovered some ancient gravestones, they smashed them to continue their digging. Not really what they should have done (in my opinion), but hardly screaming-banner-headline stuff.
What confuses me is the idea that, to make things worse, some of the graves belonged to children. I understand the LES wants to try and make every story as dramatic as it can, but is there actually anyone, anywhere, who thinks it worse to desecrate a child's grave than an adult's?
I've always struggled with the idea that a child's death is more tragic than an adult's (in the abstract, I mean - I understand it's a tragedy to, say, the child's parents). But that this should carry on into the hereafter to make a child's grave more sacred than an adult's... well, I just don't get it.

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On a t-shirt for Bea, post-haste, please :)
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Erm, but yes. It would have been nicer if they'd moved, rather than smashed, the stones, but they're just stones, not bodies, and even if they'd been bodies, they're just old bones, not living people. I think the dead still outnumber the living, but all the same, there's only so much respect we can pay them and their bones and their stones.
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:)
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To me that sounds like there were corpse parts flying every which way. Which, from your later comments, there were not, they broke some rocks with grave details on. Of people who died so long ago that nobody would have a clue who they were anyway.
In other countries, your burial plot isn't for ever, so *shrug*. Over the course of history, there have been a lot of burials, how far back are we supposed to go?
On an unrelated note, does this mean you haven't died from being ill on Saturday? I do hope so.
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The Book of the Film
The interesting part for me is that the stones were already buried and laid flat, so I am wondering what objections there were to them being moved and covered up e.g. 100 years ago. I know that London graveyards were notoriously full up by the end of the 19th century, hence the big cemeteries out at Mortlake etc. It also used to be taken fairly for granted that coffins etc. would be moved anyway. There is half a chance that those who were originally buried under the stones were moved elsewhere back then or previously, even the itty bitty kiddiwinks (nope, I'm not up for the sentimentality part here either. On average, those buried with costly headstones would not even have been the great disenfranchised, forsaken and overlooked in life.).
To me it would be more interesting if they can find that out. Were the actual bodies relocated in an official capacity? Was it really fair enough that the headstones were stuck under the garden for drainage etc? Is there a record of this or are we looking at a fin de siècle hush up? WE SHOULD BE TOLD!
Re: The Book of the Film
I may be mis-remembering any number of those details, though.
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I had to read it all when I was doing an archaeology course and I have since forgotten most of it :-).
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Are you aware of
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I must admit years back as a kid, watching a TV show and seeing a man have to choose between his wife and his child.....They both chose the child. I was thinking WTF, save the wife and have another one, have two !
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I think a major part of the story may actually be related to the ES having recently run a campaign against *new* unmarked graves for newly dead children. But that may just be my cynicism.
Cynic, n: a blackguard whose faulty vision sees things as they are, not as they ought to be. -- Ambrose Bierce
1 I'm slightly worried by my first interaction with an LJ user being halfway to facetious.