[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
DEATH AND DISPOSAL OF THE DEAD 549 This is thought to be the spirit of the tree coming out. If these little explosions are heard at night near the houses, one or two men will go out with bows and arrows and shoot at the trees to drive their spirits away. The spirit of the mbal avov tree, in particular, may sometimes be seen moving about in the dark in a vaguely human form. Should anyone then shoot at it, it at once becomes stationary, and on approaching it, it is seen to have returned to its tree form. As we have seen, a oeremony is performed on the tenth day after a man’s death to speed the nimwinin on its way to the other world, but for about a month the ghost is conceived to haunt the locality, and in particular its house. This is not, however, usually abandoned on the death of the owner; his sons or other close relatives generally continue to live in it. But if a ghost is particularly feared or is unusually troublesome a pudding is put out near the approach to the house or houses with the words : " Aavu, naiew timmgk etingk â€ù (“ Grandfather, this here is thy pudding â€ù). This is not done so much to propitiate or conciliate the ghost as to give him food so that he may not come and eat that which the people have cooked for themselves. People are very much afraid of eating anything which has been touched by a ghost. Hysteria and various kinds of sickness are attributed to this cause. For this reason a man is afraid of eating in the dark, lest a ghost should come up and nibble the other end of the piece of food which he is biting. There is no visible change in the food which a ghost has eaten ; he is supposed to consume it " spiritually " in some way. If those who have set out a special pudding for a ghost to feed upon see that part of it really has been eaten away, they are annoyed for they know that something, perhaps a rat, has come and taken part of that which was put out for the temss. Sometimes the spirits of the dead will behave like poltergeist. They beat the rhythm of the village on the gongs, roll logs along the floor and move stones, all without the appearance of any visible agency, ‘ If a ghost makes itself particularly offensive there are two recognized ways of keeping it away from the dwelling-houses, In one, a man paints his face black, as he does for ï¬Åghting, puts wanamngk rattles on his ankles, and leaves of the mbwing- mbwingamb in his belt. Then he blows a conch and armed with » 1 t 4 it M L