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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
464 MALEKULA but it seems that usually several men will enter at one and the same time, When all the preparations have been COMPLETED, each candidate brings a pig on to the dancing ground and pays it to the man, a member of the Nevinbur, from whom he is buying admittance. Whether this man is of necessity related to the candidate in any special way is not clear. On one occasion he stood to the purchaser in the position of teta, " classiticatory " father, but this may have been a coincidence. The recipient of the pig passes it on to some friend of his, who apparently keeps it, for the animal is not killed and eaten. The reason for this abstemiousness is doubtless that the pig which is thus paid for entrance is a female, nivinrasin. This is a rather surprising feature, for such a beast is the very" antithesis of ileo, and only women would eat it. Deacon commented on this, and his informant fully appreciated the contradiction that a beast so “ profane " should be a part of so " sacred â€ù a ceremony, but he maintained that this was indeed the case, he knew not why. Another pig, this time a male animal, is then paid " for Mansipâ€ù, and is killed by the candidate with a pig-killing hammer (nu:/ii matmut). This being over, four men, members of the Nevinbur, carr~yfour temes nevinbur out of the amel. Each of these is made of a short stick or bamboo, near the top of which is aï¬Åixed a head modelled in clay and painted (see Pl. XVI). The men take up their positions just inside the enclosure, immediately behind the place where Mansip's house has been set up, and holding the temes nevinbur aloft, so that their heads are visible over the top of the fence, they begin to dance. To the spectators outside it appears as though the four lame: themselves were dancing, the effect being somewhat similar to that of a “ Punch and Judy â€ù show. An old man,1 also a member of the society, now comes out oi the enclosure, carrying in his hand a wooden pig-killing hammer, and goes to that place in the fence over the top of which the temes are to be seen. As their heads appear, he smashes them with his hammer, thus destroying them. Of this it is said: "Noul m'n iwis, mrar temes tisile " (“ the maggot oi them it 1 According to one of the ï¬Åeld note-books, this old man is a member of the Nulau/an grade Vinmbamp, Whether it is always a. man of this grade who kills the tzmes, or whether it only happened that he was so on the occasion of which the informant was thinking; is not clear. It is interesting that in the same note-book, it is said to be this same person who later kills Mansip. Should it be a regular practice for a man of this grade to play this part, the-n it forms an interesting link between the Nalawan and Nzvinbur societies.—C, H. W4
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