[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
CHAPTER XIX DEATH AND TI-IE DISPOSAL OF THE DEAD IN THE NORTH LAMBUMBIJ, LAGALAG, AND LARAVAT - According to the Lagalag legend death was introduced into the world through the foolishness of one oi the ï¬Årst two human creatures created by the mythical being Hambut. Because this person misquoted the formula " Die, die, live ", which Hambut had commanded them to say, and said instead " Die, die, die for good and all", people do not Come alive again, but remain dead for ever. The Disposal 0f the Dead _ Unlike the practice of Seniang and Mewun, the bodies of the dead in Lambumbu, Laravat, and Lagalag are buried and not exposed. The most full account of the rites was obtainetlfrom the Lambumbu district. '1 Except for certain nien of the village oi Lembelag ancl tor the official magicians of the clan Ran Nembew, at whose disposal special precautions are taken to prevent the HEAD from coming into contact with the soil, the corpse is laid prone in at shallow grave at the back of the deceased's house. A year atter a body has been interred the skull and bones are dug up and placed in a basket. This is then carried amidst a crowd of people to the um! maul, or sacred place, of the clan of the deceased. Into this only one man enters, and here he lays the skull on the ground, ereets a number of small upright stones around it, and covers it over with a stone slab, thus enclosing it in a miniature stone chamber. We are not told what is done with the other’ bonzs. The only exception to this disposal of the skull in Lambumbu is the practice of putting the skulls of the magicians of the Ran Nembew clan and perhaps of those of Lernbelag into the village elub—house not into the um! maul.‘ 1 In Seniang and Mewun this removal of the bones it done at the clan lartility ceremony. In lzmlbumbu, and presumably in Lagalag also, these clan fertility rites, Nogharn. are only performed once every eight years and hence cannot also serve as an occasion for the exhumation of those who have died during the year.—C. H. w. 564