[Rambles and Recollections of an Indian Official by William Sleeman]@TWC D-Link book
Rambles and Recollections of an Indian Official

CHAPTER 4
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When the "sraddh", or funeral obsequies, were performed after the prescribed intervals,[18] the offerings and prayers were regularly made for _six souls_ instead of four; and, to this day, every member of his family, and every Hindoo who had heard the story, believed that these two serpents had a just right to be considered among his ancestors, and to be prayed for accordingly in all "sraddh".' A few days after this conversation with the Principal of the Jubbulpore College, I had a visit from Bholi Sukul, the present head of the Sihora banker's family, and youngest brother of the Brahman with whose ashes the Lodhi woman burned herself.

I requested him to tell me all that he recollected about this singular suttee, and he did so as follows: 'When my eldest brother, the father of the late Duli Sukul, who was so long a native collector under you in this district, died about twenty years ago at Sihora, a Lodhi woman, who resided two miles distant in the village of Khitoli, which has been held by our family for several generations, declared that she would burn herself with him on the funeral pile; that she had been his wife in three different births, had already burnt herself with him three times, and had to burn with him four times more.

She was then sixty years of age, and had a husband living [of] about the same age.

We were all astounded when she came forward with this story, and told her that it must be a mistake, as we were Brahmans, while she was a Lodhi.

She said that there was no mistake in the matter; that she, in the last birth, resided with my brother in the sacred city of Benares, and one day gave a holy man who came to ask charity salt, by mistake, instead of sugar, with his food.


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