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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
688 MALEKULA two minutes. Then, all being ready, he takes one very deep breath, and, sometimes shaking all over with the strain, performs the magic, holding his breath throughout, until at the very end he mutters the imprecation, which is the parting shot of the rite, releasing, as it were his concentrated emotion. We can see then, that the performance of any magical act is composed really of three parts : ï¬Årstly, the elaborate and often very lengthy preparation for the act, by a rigorous asceticism, by means of which the performer at once safeguards himself and gains power ; secondly, the magical rite itself, " the experimental arrangement and manipulation by which the intensity accumulated by the preparation is made to become effective towards a deï¬Ånite object " ; and thirdly, the words uttered, or other means employed (as, for instance, making a feint with spear or blow-gun), both to " shoot off" the magic and direct it, and to act as a flood-gate for the pent»up strain of the performer. About this Deacon stated 2' "I think this second function oi the spell is more or less recognized by the natives." Summing up and Commenting on the nature of Malekulan magic, Deacon wrote :— “It seems to me that much more attention needs to be paid to the antecedents of the magical act; that to a considerable extent the sympathetic-contagious principle which Frazer brought out is employed in preparing the channel or mechanism through which the magic is to act (similar, for instance, to a system of pulleys in mechanics), hut that the power or force is something distinct, owing its genesis to the whole ‘psychological series’ leading up to the moment at which the sympathetic~contegious mechanism is released. So far as I can see, the acceptance oi the syrnpathetic~contagious principle is absolutely im licit ; it is what ‘ logic ' or ‘ common-sense ’ is with us, a thing unthinkable to deny, inevitable, universal. It is as impossible for the native to think a proposition based on this principle untrue as it is for us to think an obvious logical proposition untrue. . . 4 Again and again a discussion has ended by my realizing that the magical principle was to my partner in the discussion so implicitly accepted as to make any consciousness of it or generalization about it unthinkable. With the greatest intelligence he would prepare to doubt or discuss any one particular method, its eflicacy, etc., but as for a suspicion that there was some fundamental mental process entering into aU his magic~no, never I This leads up to the point that the native sorcerer ormagician is absorbed, not in the mechanism of the magic, but in the ‘ psychological series ' preceding the ‘magical act ’. It seems clear that he is conscious of some entity, capable oi generalization, though he may be unable to generalize it, which
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