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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
274 MALEKULA between grades and treat the members, insignia, or image of a higher one, of which they are not members, with disrespectful familiarity. Another distinction between high and low grades is shown by the place in the dancing ground where the images are erected. It will be remembered that every Malekulan village in the south» west is divided into two parts by a boundary called naai save, on one side of which are the dwelling-houses, on the other the dancing ground with the amel at the far end. In passing from the naai save towards the amel the space becomes increasingly ileo or sacred, the back of the amel being the most sacred place of all. In accordance with this we ï¬Ånd that the images set up at entrance to the lower Nimangki grades are planted nearer to the mum" sew} those of the higher grades nearer to the amel, while for the highest grade of all, Nam Wemnmg, a stone carved with many faces and bodies is erected some distance behind the amel, in the wood at the back called nimbimb lemwemi (“ the tangled undergrowth â€ù). This stone is very ileo, and is supposed to be very potent ;' its spirit (nimwinin) = may kill a man of any grade, other than a member of Nam Wemnmg, whotpuches it or goes near to it. The names of the Seniang Nimangki grades in the order in which they are usually entered, together with the titles which are bestowed on their members, are as follows :—- Gmde Name. Grade Title. . Nuamb Tileo . . Ambkon. N lmri M Zmngk . . L . N aamb Loh . . Barang bie. . Nimbinben . . Mwelip ‘ Mbon,-or Mwelip Sal. . N eve! . - . Vetndum or Vetn Mbuas. . N aai M bimbamp . Barang Telrnbwir. . N ahav Ndal . . Andal 07 Liwis Ndurn. ‘lG’IU1§€A3$P-* ‘ Curiously enough, for the lowest Nimangki grade of all, a rough cheap image is actually put up temporarily inside the amel. Concerning this, Deacon writes : " I think this is explicable, however " ; but unfortunately he does not SHOW in what way.-C. H. w. ' It is interesting that the spirit of the stone is called nimminin, for this ' th d 5 th ul 0 ' it of human b 'n and oi certain lants is e term use or e so r spir 1 er g p and animals, which survives death, and which when it appears to men in a. visible iorrn after death is called a Imus. The use of the term m'm|m'm'» for the spirit 0! this effigy indicates that the stone is regarded as having a personality all its own, apart irorn that of the dead man, lemds, who uses it as a temporary abodei—C, H. W. . 3 See n. 1, p. 275.
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