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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
ï¬År ii l. ll .-.~=< rl =*;=.se i i ll fr 11 »! 7'; .. |1 . ll} " ll ii 1 .. ii H r H li r. i ,I “ ,. lr H ‘. W, W. .j/ L 324 MALEKULA " wears the body-painting which is common to members of Nzliwis and Nimew grades. He does not wear a spider's web head- dress, but the ï¬Ållet mzai lislis is bound on the hawk’s feathers and stuck in his hair. On his wrists are pig's tusk bracelets and on his legs wanamngk anklets. As soon as he stops dancing all the other men present break into the dance mas’ naamel. When this is over the candidate purchases his new hawk‘s feather and retircs to be painted red all over according to the design of this grade and to be decorated with hawk’s feathers in his hair. He then springs forth on to the dancing ground, and having sent a friend to fetch the ï¬Ånal sacriï¬Åcial pig, he continues dancing for a while. When the pig has been brought he removes the navel mzmbar from where it is standing to a place close to the amel ; then, taking his bow and arrows, he mounts this stone and shoots at the pig which another man is still holding. (The animal is not killed.) He now steps down and lays the bow and arrows on the ground beside a conch. There then follows the dance of the trios round the glmgs ; ï¬Årst the candidate and two of the introducer's mates, and theu three other mates, but for so low a grade as Ntmmel the third ‘dance by the three seniors, which is a part of the Ne1/elvel rites, does not take place.‘ The ï¬Årst two mates who danced then signal the other three to kill the pig, The rhythm mielmizl/mas is beaten, the conch is broken against the pig’s forehead, and the animal is ï¬Ånally dispatched with a spear which has been fetched from the amel for the purpose. After this the candidate stands by the new mzmlmr and receives his new title, Telmbwir. N imew We have now described as fully as the notes will warrant the rites attendant upon all the Nimangki grades which are regarded as native to Seniang, save those of Tortor Nimew, T orlor Moremba, and Nimew. Of the ï¬Årst two nothing has been recorded, while the notes dealing with the last are fragmentary, confused, and contradictory. The following account so far as it goes is probably reliable, though it is, plainly, very incomplete. It seems that generally two or three men purchase this grade at the sa.rne time. Each one having found a man to act as his 1 This is probably true also oi the other low grades which we have been considering, though there in no direct evidence mi the |ubject.—C. H. W. < < Z . ; r , ‘mi 1 Iv ,. 1 ,i , ,_l l 4 i
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