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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
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THE AMBAT, KABAT, AND HAMBAT 639 been told, but the other said “ Die, die, ï¬Ånish â€ù. Then Hambut came and said : “ I did not say you two were to say thus. You have spoken that which is bad. I said you were to say ' Die, die, live’." Had they done as he told them, then, although they would have died, they would have come alive again, but now they must die for good and all. This story is markedly unlike the more common death myth of the New Hebrides, which attributes death to an old woman who having sloughed her skin donned it again on account other grandchildren ; but the general theme, the command which was obeyed by one and disobeyed by the other, recalls the story oi the death of Butwanabaghap. The analogy is by no means close, but it is signiï¬Åcant that in one the Kabat and in the other Hambut say that had their orders been obeyed death would still have occurred, but people would have lived again after it. In this both stories differ from "other myths which tell that normally death would never have come into the world at all.‘ Beyond these two stories we know nothing of Hambut, save that there is a, geometrical ï¬Ågure representing him sitting by the sca»sh0re sharpening an adze and being gradually driven back by the incoming tide. No legend concerning such an episode has been recorded. Were we acquainted only with tho mythology about the ï¬Åve Ambat brothers in Seniang and Humbut in Lagalag it is improbable that we should have recognized any connection between the two unless the name and the association with geometrical ï¬Ågures had given us a clue. But with Kabat and Hambat in the intervening districts it becomes almost indisputable that all four are different versions of the same beings or being. The greatest gap in the chain—due most probably to our lack of information—is between the Kabat and Hambat, hut between these there is one link of paramount importance. This is the most sacred ceremony of "making man ", which is intimately bound up with the Kabat and Hambat in their respective districts, and which also occurs, so far as we know, associated with the Ambat brothers in Tomman Island. In Lagalag, however, though clan iertility ceremonies exist, there is nothing comparable with the N agharo N omur of Lembelag or the Nogho Tilabwe of Mewun. X For the we of this myth v. Appendix B. Deacon writes concerning it: " The tile is reminiscent oi the common Airican story oi the Two Messengers, the Creator giving one messenger the formula of lilo, the other mat of death." ll 1? 1-? 5 ' l
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