A mother bearing her child's coffin in a funeral procession for victims of the plague. Colour lithograph after F. Jenewein, 1900.
- Jenewein, Felix, 1857-1905.
- Date:
- 1901
- Reference:
- 10128i
- Part of:
- The plague : A cycle of six pictures
- Pictures
- Online
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Subject described by Karel B. Mádl as follows: "A universal dying spread over the towns and the country, like a rapacious flood. "Not many bodies were accompanied by a dozen neighbours; the bier was carried, not by honourable, worthy citizens, but by sextons of the lowest people, called plague servants, who were dearly paid for their service and which they performed hurridly [sic]. The priests did not lose time in saying prayers and in performing rites, and buried the bodies in an empty grave ", says Bocaccio [sic]. Jenewein is here equally striking and even more intensive than the old author. The sky is dark, the trees uplift sadly their bare branches and the gray outlines of a cathedral loom behind. In the background a long, ghastly procession with coffins hastens onward. Men quake and as a personification of human pain and terror a woman with bloodshot and staring eyes meets the procession; it is a mother, burying her own child."
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