[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
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1 .4. , .. . .; ‘I £1 r )- ., ,; THE NIMANGKI SOCIETY 307 stamp rhythmically and one of the others present cries out: " W&—.¢-—ei! NambaL—e—ei1 Mbwil ab-—e—e—¢1' I " Then the old man breaks through the nisaim, and while all those present give him a " whoop! " as a send-off he runs at full speed in the direction oi the gongs. Just before he reaches them, he springs into the air, with extended arms and fluttering HANDS, in imitation of the nambnl hawk. He lands near the gongs, dances round them once, and then speeds back to the mlseilu. Everyone once more cries out " Mbwil all"; the men at the gongs beat a rapid tattoo and then gradually change into a solemn introductory rhythm. At this point those who have been forming the m'seiLu cast down their coco-nut fronds, and the old man again runs towards the gongs. Again he leaps with extended arms and fluttering HANDS as he nears them ; but then the gongs change to the rhythm lemilmd, and all those present swing into the dance. ' It is now time to invest the candidate with a new hawk‘s feather, a badge of all Nimangki grades. For this he pays his introducer one pig, the two men circling round the gongs as usual. The next pig to be paid is one to the old man who represented the nambal hawk, for a netel muluwmi ï¬Ållet, which the latter had been carrying in his hand throughout his dance, and which he now gives to the candidate. When this transaction is ï¬Ånished the candidate retires into the amel nitzmn and is -painted with the designs oi his new rank—the same designs iwhioh~were used to decorate the old man in the niseilu. When ihoisieady, the gongs beat and he springs out and dances towards -‘them.’ >He now tells a friend to go and ietch one of his—the -ta.ndidate's—pigs. Meanwhile he himself takes a spear in his Iright hand and a conch in his left; the spear he HANDS to one ‘of the introduoer’s " mates " the conch to another. These two men and the candidate then dance round the gongs, return to their ï¬Årst position and lay the conch and spear on the ground. Two of the introducer‘s peers from another village now come up and receive the conch and spear from one of the mates. Then this man and the two peers dance round the gangs, just as the candidate and the two mates had done, returning to their ï¬Årst position and laying down both spear and conch. Three old men of high rank now step forward; one picks up the spear, another the conch, and the third remains empty~handed. As