Following the discovery of the grave that I reported in a
recent post, I did a bit of digging on the internet today (like the pun?) I
came across a guide written by a man who’d researched the law on such matters,
and it seems there are three fundamental facts that apply:
1) There’s no law requiring that a body be buried in
consecrated ground. All that’s required is the landowner’s permission, which
means you can be buried in your own garden if you like, as long as it’s your
property.
2) The only grounds on which the local authority can object
are (a) if they can demonstrate that the body (which is legally deemed
‘clinical waste’) poses a pollution threat to the water table, or (b) if the
cause of death is on a list of virulent diseases such as typhus or anthrax that
are now virtually extinct in western, developed countries.
3) There must be at least thirty inches of earth between the
top of the body and the surface of the ground.
So, since I would quite like to stay in this area but don’t
own my own house, I went to see Sarah’s mother today and put the question to
her.
‘How would you feel about having a body in your garden?’
‘A body? What sort of a body?’
‘A human body. A dead one.’
‘Whose dead body?’
‘Mine.’
‘But you’re not dead.’
‘No, I know, but I will be one day and I’d quite like to
stay around here. You’re the only person I know who owns a house in the
vicinity.’
‘Are you completely mad?’
‘I expect so, but that’s beside the point. The point is, I
wouldn’t be any trouble. I suppose it would be a bit of a nuisance having to
rotovate around me, and you might feel uneasy about planting root vegetables
there, and I daresay you’d want to stop the dog burying her bone on the spot
just in case she retrieved more than she’d put in, but apart from that I’d be
very quiet. You’d forget I was there after a while.’
‘No, I wouldn’t. I’d have to put with friends and relations
swanning around my garden with flowers and things. They’d interrupt my
afternoon tea.’
‘Oh, yes. Never thought of that.’
‘And have you given due consideration to the possibility of
polluting my water table?’
‘No.’
‘And don’t you think it might upset Sarah? She has a
delicate constitution, you know.’
‘But you could put a seat next to the grave. She could wile
away the summer evenings engaged in conversation with me.’
‘Conversation?’
‘Well, she could talk and I could pretend I was listening.’
‘I see. One final question. Are you trying to wind me
up?’
‘Er...’
‘I thought so. Go away.’
Sarah’s mother can be a bit uncompromising sometimes, so it
seems I’m back to plan A – having my ashes scattered around the base of my
favourite sycamore tree. Better go and talk to the tree tomorrow.
4 comments:
Oh this post is so sad. Why spend life contemplating death? It's short enough as it is. No wonder she keeps her daughter away from you!
What happened to your sense of humour? And the reason she keeps her daughter away from is because she wants me for herself. It's in the smile!
Being ash under big trees sounds good to me. Though being ash in the sea is more often practised here.
Your post got me thinking of concept of 'momento mori'. It's not sad thing to me for it got me appreciate everyday life.
Actually, Mei-shan, this post was intended as a joke. Must be my sense of humour.
Your comment confused me for a second. One of the biggest of the common native trees in Britain is called the ash tree. And yes, I do like the idea of having my mortal remains feeding a tree. Trees are good. They even seem to like me.
And did you know that a person's mortal remains (after incineration) fit into a bag about the size of a bread wrapper? What I'm curious to know is whether the ashes of brown-skinned people are a different colour than those of white people. And whether if you have a lot of tattooes, the ashes are streaked with blue.
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