[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
264 MALEKULA ~ / ' similar to those of Laravat and Northern Lambumbu, is carried out. If any boy is seen to be drooping or closing his eyes he is at once startled or kicked into wakefulness again, This dance and the " hoaxes " are continued throughout the period‘ of seclusion, but with less intensity than during the ï¬Årst week. In performing nilit the men line up inside the ghamal bagho, holding thick barnboos and move round with a slow and solemn tread, striking the bamboos on the ground at every second step, exactly in the manner described in the account of the incision rites of Laravat. The novices meanwhile crouch up against the walls for fear of being kicked or struck. When one band of men is tired another will take its place, and so the dance is kept up for a long time. People from neighbouring villages come to take part, the different villages dancing on different nights. The approach of such a group of visitors is heralded by wild singing and yelling to strike terror into the boys. When they have ï¬Ånished their task these strangers are liberally rewarded by the guardians with an abundance of food. In order to awe and frighten the boys still further a number of carvings of birds, such as the m'mbel hawk, are made by the men and fastened to the top of the house posts inside the ghamal. These are so high up that the boys cannot make out whether they are alive or only carvings, nor quite what they are, and the dubut add to their mystification. The most terrifying experiences which the mugh vel have to go through, however, are the “ hoaxes â€ù referred to above. Apart from their effect of frightening the boys, it is not quite clear what their real purpose is, but in Deacon's opinion “ the importance of bagha lies, not in the circumcision itself, but in the series of performances or ' hoaxes ’ which take place during the thirty days’ seclusion". Some of them are undoubtedly like those of Laravat, connected with ghosts, but others would seem to be nothing more than trials and tests of endurance for the novices. This last is particularly true of the " hoaxes" per- formed during the day time. Of those which are carried out at night the following are typical. In one a man is carefully dressed up in banana leaves and creepers so that his body is completely covered. His head, especially, is made to appear like a tangled mass of creeper ropes. He is then decked out in all kinds of scarlet flowers such
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