[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
THE NALAWAN SOCIETY 399 on this occasion. When the dance is ended the candidate kills a mbuas Mos pig for the performers to eat. Day having dawned, dancers and candidate all go together to cut a bamboo (nambm namlmngk). This is decorated with croton leaves and planted outside the amel, a little to the right-hand side of it.‘ (If there are several candidates, a bamboo is cut for each, and all are planted in this position in a straight line.) The carved posts are then brought out of the amel; the two made of tree-fern are planted upright on either side of the candidate's decorated bamboo, the female on the right-hand side of the male, and the long bamboo with the faces of the “ children " is laid across their top, the heads of the “ mother â€ù and " father â€ù being cleft so that it rests secure. If there is more than one candidate, each has his own pair of tree-fern images, but it seems that a single cross-pole is used for all. Thus if many are entering the grade there is a line of decorated bamboos (mzmbm mzmbzmgk) ; and alternating with these bamboos are a number of upright carved tree-fern posts all united by a long transverse pole with a face carved at either end. This is the structure called naainggol, which gives its name to this N alzm/an (v. Fig. 23). On the same day that the naainggal is erected the candidate pays a further pig to his introducer for the decorated bamboos? All the preparations being now completed, the gongs are beaten at sunset with the rhythm naml ms, followed by that of aisumqï¬Åndew, the signal for members of the N alawan in the neighbouring villages to come for the ceremonies and dances of the morrow. Next morning many men come, and the dance nimnumbal is started, the visitors, candidate, and introducer all performing, this time to the accompaniment of the gongs. At about three o'clock in the afternoon the introducer takes a coco-nut in one hand and a conch shell in the other, and calls-out : " Ai-—ai-—m' ! " to which the candidate replies. The rhythm mai -uihoirm is beaten and the candidate and introducer dance round the gongs in opposite directions, as is done when “circlingâ€ù for pigs. Then the latter hands the coco-nut to the candidate and dances back away from the gongs. The coco-nut which is thus given is one which has begun to sprout and its function is exactly * In referring to the position of objects in the dancing ground, it is supposed that the observer is standing with his back to the amal and looking towards the dwelling huts.-—C. H. W. . ’ To make this payment is termed ikimmu.—-A. B. D. » i. M 1, i ii i 1' =5 l 1 ll H5 L_ .