[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
RITUAL LIFE or WOMEN 479 the grade to which a woman belongs the more potent is her / quality of ignh, even as in the Nimangki the higher a rnan’s status the more strongly ileo he is. The parallelism must not, however, be carried too far, for small children as well as all women are regarded as iguh. It may be inferred, therefore, that the possession of the quality oi igah does not depend solely upon membership of the Lap/zs, but rather that such membershp, particularly of the high grades, greatly increases it. When a small boy enters the Nimomgki and leaves his mother's hearth, he ceases to be igah and becomes instead in a very mild degree flan. THE Lupus or Semzmc. The ceremonies oi the Lupus take place in a house called m'1/aval which is built far away in the bush. In this house there are two tame: or human efligies, one of a man, the other of a woman. These are potently igah, and have great power to inflict harm on any man, principally by neutralizing or destroying his state of ilea, but they are also said to have the power of killing him. Their position in the Lupus and towards men in general may be compared with that of the stone set up at entrance to the Nimangki grade Nam Wmnung, which can inflict disease and even death on a woman or a man of lower rank who dares to approach it.‘ In this same house there is kept also the most igah object of all, a kind of basket head-dress called ms melemet narmd lapas, which may be assumed only by women who have purchased the three highest grades of their society. Any man who by accident or intent passed nearby or entered the house containing this head-dress would forthwith lose his state of ileo. Even it he were man of the highest Nimzmgki rank and therefore possessed oi a great degree of ilm all this would pass irom him and he would become “ like a child" so potent is the quality of igah attached to the nemetemzt noomi. He would lose his Nimangki rank and Nimnngki title, and men would call him by his personal name; he would be treated with ridicule, contempt, or pity until he had collected sufficient wealth of pigs I It is just possible um in his statements concerning these two eagles, Deacon is confusing the nivaval with the house erected in the clearing nearby for 1 woman who it entering a Laps: degree. The front and back p05¢S 01 this house are two (anus and it is snjtl that when these 8117 Set up tor I W0mun entering 1 high rank they are very dangerous to men. (See below.)-—C, H. w.