[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
DEATH AND DISPOSAL OF THE DEAD 551 and saw that they were ï¬Årmly ï¬Åxed up in a tree with a deep pool of water below. The ghost had abandoned them because one had opened his eyes, so they had to climb down and return to their village as best they could. This rite of divination is called temes rambu. It appears from this account that the temes who conducts the men on their wild journey is not necessarily that of the man who has just died and whose murderer the living are seeking out. In Lambumbu, where there is an almost identical ceremony, it is deï¬Ånitely stated that though the ghost of the deceased may pull the bamboo, it does not necessarily nor even properly do so. g Besides the ordinary ghosts of the dead, there are certain other spiritual beings who are deï¬Ånitely regarded as temes and as having once been human, but who have attained an individual importance and continue to interest themselves actively in the affairs of the living. Two of these are women, called Lirew Mbetep and Lisa Wut, who visit men in their sleep in erotic dreams. In particular they haunt a spot on the road to Looru. They are bad ghosts, for, should a man marry after he has had connection with one of them in his dreams, they will cause his wife to fall sick and die. There are other ghosts which are men. These counterfeit the appearance of a woman’s husband and make her lie with them under the impression that it is her husband whom she is embracing. Though not entirely approved of by the husband, such a ghost is accepted by him with a good grace, for it is recognized that these male temes are benevolent since they cause a woman to bear a man child. One whose wife is barren welcomes their attentions, therefore. The following is an actual example of such a. visitation. A certain man and his wife went up, with others of their village, to work in the yam gardens. The man went into the bush to gather sticks. A short while after his wife saw him come towards her and, when the others were not looking, break a stick purposely so that she could see. This indicated that he wanted to have intercourse with her. (It is the general way of conveying this to a woman when other people are about and a man does not wish them to know.) He then left the garden ,by one path and she by another, and they lay together. The woman then came back by herself along the same path and met her husband again in the garden. Nowhe took a. stick and E . . . 4 € r la l