[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
DEATH AND DISPOSAL OF THE DEAD 581 commonly supposed to marry. A ghost is incapable zi second death. Unless it takm up its residence in some or unless it is for some reason specially feared, it appears rather rapidly in memory, though it is always regarded vaguely in Iambi with all the thousands of other forgotten ghosts. ' On one point no explanation is offered. As we have seen, every man of Lambumbu at some time during his life gives a pig to his maternal uncle for ivi nambung, that is to ensure that his soul or spirit shall at death return to his maternal uncle's village, that is to his mother's clansfolk. For a woman her husband gives a pig at her death to a man representing her -maternal uncle for the same purpose, and this is done, too, ior a rhan if through some mishap he has not paid the pig earlier. ‘Since on its departure from the body the spirit is dismissed to Iambi, what is meant by its return to its mother's or maternal uncle’s village? It is conceivable that it is believed to pass hhrough this village on its way to Iambi, or it may be that the expression is in some sense a metaphorical one. Unfortunately we cannot tell for certain what the true signiï¬Åcance of iui namlnmg may be, and can only note the existence of the custom as further evidence of the close bonds which are recognized in this patri- lineal community between an individual and his (or her) mother's kindred. DEATH AND Tl-IE DISPOSAL on TH!-I DEA!) AMONG rm: Big Nambas The myth which explains how death came into the world is, among the Big Nambas, quite different from that found either in Mewun or in Lagalag. In the olden days, it is said, people did not die, but when they grew old they changed their skins and were thus rejuvenated. There was at this time an old Woman who was looking after her grandson. While he was playing beside a stream she retired and sloughed her old skin, S0 that she reappeared as a young woman. The child, seeing the young stranger, on her return, began to cry and call for his grandmother. She tried to pacify him, assuring him that she really was his grandmother, but that she had become young again. But the child only howled the more, and ï¬Ånally the woman, in a huff, said: "Very well, if you want your old