[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR ENGINE]
of .» 676 MALEKULA mention of the sorcerer muttering any spell when working nimesian mmls similar to the spell used in " making " war, but this may well be an omission on the part of the informant. The people of Looru, and perhaps also of Uraau, have a special means oi bringing about an enerny’s death which appears to be regarded by the natives as a form of nimesirm. In the nembrmbrkrm of each oi these villages stands a stone: “ The Stone of Famine " (Nevet Namar). Each of these stones is the abode of, or “ has ", a spirit (nevet namar ioiien m'mzm'm'n). The sorcerer takes some of his enerny’s excrement, puts it i.n a coco-nut and places it on the must namar. The spirit of the stone then devours it—iu accordance with the general theory that ghosts eat eXcrement—a.nd the victim dies.‘ The other magical methods mentioned above all seem to work through the agency of " poison It is often very riifï¬Åcult to be sure whether the “ poison â€ù used is of a magical nature or whether it is genuine poison as the white man understands this word. This is particularly true in connection with nendur and nimesian, i.n the practice of which “ poison â€ù is put in the food of a man, who after eating it falls ill with vomiting and dies. In nimbwilei katkat it seems more probable that the poison is only magical. The method followed for this is to coat the end of a hollow bamboo rod with the " poison â€ù, or to put a small pellet of it just inside the tube. When the man he wishes to kill comes in view, the sorcerer points the bamboo in his direction and then, taking inï¬Ånite care not to inhale the “ poison â€ù himself, he blows it towards his victim, as though from a blow‘-gun. Another method of poisoning a man from a distance which is also called nimbwilei katkat is to rub the “ poison â€ù on to the point of a spear. A man then takes this weapon and hides in the undergrowth which lines the bush-path along which he expects his foe to come. As this man walks past him, the sorcerer makes a feint towards him with his spear and thereby conveys into his body the poisonous quality of the substance on the spear-point. The victim sees and feels nothing, but after a while he will grow sick and die. Another sure way of making a man ill, which ‘ It is stated in the notes that this spirit Oi the stone “ is used just as the cycas spirit is used in one kind of death magic ". Nowhere else is there any mention of the cycas spirit being used for this purpose. It is ossible, however, that the form oi magic called m'mbu/unu involves the aid oip the spirit of the cycas which is burnt.—C. H. W. "1 1 i