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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
Y’? ‘:~ l;»< , 1'1i'< 25; ‘ if .l_.'1'_" x J’ g 5, rm: NIMANGKI SOCIETY 197 unlike that of chewing gum, shake it, paint it red, and fasten it to the temes. This carved and decorated pole is now planted close to the nwunui, and with it in the same hole are put a spray of the red cordyline mzari mama! and two sprays of nani nu/. Four bamboos of the variety called nambm or lemes are planted around those and a kind of numbul is erected with mm’ nw leaves fastened to the string thereof. On the morning of the festivities visitors arrive from the neighbouring hamlets and some fonn up into a procession at the spot just outside the village called the mahmhal, while others beat rendir naai mbimbamp on the gangs. Those who constitute the procession are not only men who have themselves entered Naai M bimbarap ; any man who is a member of any N imangki grade, except the candidate himself, may join in it. All carry bows and arrows, saving the two men at the head and tail of the ï¬Åle who have conches (pupa) on which they blow. In the centre walks one who has been blackened from head to foot, this being the body decoration for members of this degree.‘ In this order they march up to the gongs. The candidate then takes a conch, and he and the man painted black execute a pas-de-deux, "circling" round the gangs, while the procession breaks up. The candidate then comes forward and pays to thc blackened man one pig for the new hawk’s feather with which he is now invested. After this he retires to the matanhal and there is decorated. He is painted black all over ; a spray of mbm'ng- nibwihgilmb leaves is stuck into his belt at the back, and a ï¬Ållet of -:'n1¢'1.“_t' h'sl1's encircles his forehead. The gongs are then beaten ;lwu'thubhe)i1hybhm‘mizlndelmas, and with his pig-killing hammer shfoulder and a conch in one hand, he dances. When héi1;gi'is_»‘iï¬Ågnishedfhis performance what we may term the " dance o'fut1ie:~Qr‘iosifl takes place: first the candidate and two of his iniendsérone of whom carries the pig-1¢11er, the other the ¢°n¢h_ 55 circle â€ù round zthe gongs; then the introducor and two of his niates do the same; lastly the man painted black and two of his-friends follow suit, all to the same rhythm. It is important to‘ notice‘ that on this occasion ndelndelmas is beaten not to announce that a pig is going to be killed, which is its usual signiï¬Åcance, but because it is the rhythm used to indicate this grade, which, like the others of this group, has no true rhythm 1 This man is probably the intr01luoer's chief mate.—C. H. w,
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