Page:Frazer (1890) The Golden Bough (IA goldenboughstudy01fraz).djvu/328

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306
OSIRIS AS
CHAP.

mysteries of the god, the innermost secret that was only revealed to the initiated. In estimating the mythical character of Osiris very great weight must be given to this monument. The legend that his mangled remains were scattered up and down the land may be a mythical way of expressing either the sowing or the winnowing of the grain. The latter interpretation is supported by the story that Isis placed the severed limbs of Osiris on a corn-sieve.[1] Or the legend may be a reminiscence of the custom of slaying a human victim (probably considered as a representative of the corn-spirit) and distributing his flesh or scattering his ashes over the fields to fertilise them. We have already seen that in modern Europe the figure of “Death” is sometimes torn in pieces, and that the fragments are then buried in the fields to make the crops grow well.[2] Later on we shall meet with examples of human victims being treated in the same way. With regard to the ancient Egyptians, we have it on the authority of Manetho that they used to burn red-haired men and scatter their ashes with winnowing-fans.[3] That this custom was not, as might perhaps have been supposed, a mere way of wreaking their spite on foreigners, amongst whom rather than amongst the native Egyptians red-haired people would generally be found, appears from the fact that the oxen which were sacrificed had also to be red; a single black or white hair found on a beast would have disqualified it for the sacrifice.[4] The red hair of the human victims was thus probably essential; the fact that they were generally foreigners was only accidental.


  1. Servius on Virgil, Georg. i. 166.
  2. Above, p. 267.
  3. Plutarch, Isis et Osiris, 73, cp. 33; Diodorus, i. 88.
  4. Plutarch, op. cit. 31; Herodotus, ii. 38.