Assisi: An Online Journal of Arts & Letters Volume 4, Issues 1 & 2 | Page 53

! LUCILLE LANG DAY CHILD’S GRAVE AND FINERY A ten-thousand-year-old grave of a child about three years old, covered with ochre dust and marked with three stones, nestled in a rock shelter under an overhanging cliff in southern France. More than fifteen hundred beads, carefully carved from seashells and animal teeth, adorned his neck, wrists, elbows, ankles and knees. Marks inside the beads show a needle passed through them: they were sewn onto clothes that disintegrated long ago. Scratches and nicks on the outside imply the child wore these beaded clothes when he was playing. Anthropologists say this finery must signify hereditary social status. But maybe he was an only child whose grandmother polished the beads and sewed them onto his clothes while his father hunted and his mother gathered berries, the way a grandmother today might knit or crochet a sweater or blanket. Or maybe his parents were so broken by his death that they sewed all their own beads onto his burial clothes, so anyone finding his grave would know how much he mattered. !!Assisi!!!47!