[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
THE NIMANGKI TLEL SOCIETY 455 The period of seclusion from when the novices ï¬Årst go into aiter the performance of the nenup rite, until the the loghzrr, time when they leave after the big dance, is said to cover a space oi about three or fnur months. This does not tally with the calendar oi activities as set forth i.n the account oi entrance into Naai M0'r6h. According to this only thirty days are accounted for, but this is almost certainly due to the fact that the informant failed to give a complete recital oi the proceedings, and mentioned only those incidents which had impressed hi.m most or which he was willing to mention to the ethnograplier. Clearly 21 point of outstanding importance to him were the intervals of ï¬Åve days which elapsed between each phase oi the ceremonies 1 there are ï¬Åve days between the exhumation of the bones and the nemzp rite; ï¬Åve more between the nemzp and the nmsensung- gorian ceremony ; and yet ï¬Åve again between this and the investing oi the candidates with the Maui mbis. The only interval which is not a ï¬Åve days’ one is that between the ï¬Årst trial per- formance of the dance and the setting up of the new/ar nan lam, which is said to take place eight days later. But the notes about thi art of the ceremony are rough in the extreme, and foo B P much conï¬Ådence should not therefore be placed in them. On ' ' ' l 't became inquiring into the signiï¬Åcance of the ï¬Åve-day interva s, i - izlear. that they were regarded as a repetition of the funeral feasts occur‘ _ev‘cry‘-five days until one hundred days have elapsed i ;'"»i-Vi1$rl‘1‘i‘ti;he"’~_'£ixiie-iaf"the man's death, when the ceremony nitmah §¥_i%§'*£i§;l‘¢l§§S':{f};i§§f{'eriiphasizes still further the close connection in-: tweem.!he>lyi>niqngki Tlal and the ghosts of the dead. " iinjaressed Deacon very greatly was that ‘;bï¬Åtx:€??“'_'hil9~"iY§htfl1ig]ti">I181 of Lambuinbu and the Tamale ‘:$0CietleS of the Banks Islands. He wrote :4 fl i» ," It is very instructive to compare in detail the Nivriangki P l1,J:£,;:;;;i,T:,:;f;:£o‘£: ‘*“*i"%-t is 2“~““’¢"’i?iil° H13 9 0 € WWW B, ll C , iiesafl-xi iglggrnthe hats bging ghosts seems to be quite In a. letter he developed this theme :— _ “ In view of the striking resemblance oi the Nimangki Tlzl _ to_the Banks T amalz the naming of the Nimangki"1'lel is interesting. Rivers was always getting at the RELATION oi the Suki;/z to the T at * h so to speak, Lhe Tamale is simply called ‘the Sacred am 5, OTB, Suhwr and the RELATION is fairly clear. The Nwumgln Tlel here